Too Much Sitting Flashcards
What is Sedentary Behaviour?
- Any waking behaviour characterized by an energy expenditure < 1.5 metabolic equivalents (METs) while in a sitting or reclining position
What is a MET?
one MET is defined as 1kcal/kg/hour and is roughly equivalent to the oxygen cost of sitting quietly
Historial Perspective
- first evidence that inactivity is bad for you was published in the Lancet by Morris et al in 1953
- included in their seminal work was an ecologic study of heart disease mortality and occupational physical activity
Study: Does physical activity attenuate, or even eliminate, the detrimental association of sitting time with mortality? A harmonised meta-analysis of data from more than 1 million men and women
Interpretation:
- high levels of moderate intensity physical activity (about 60-75 min a day) seem to eliminate increased risk of death assosciated with high sitting time. Although does not eliminate the increased risk associates with high TV-viewing time
Physical Activity and Mortality: The Potential Impact of Sitting
- In addition to promoting reductions in sedentary behaviours, these results indicate that a strong public health focus should remain on increasing levels of MVPA, irrespective of the amount of time people spend sitting in a day. Individuals who are forced to sit throughout the day because of educational or occupational constraints should aim for the high end of the MVPA recommendations, not the low end.
Health Consequences of Sedentarism
Compromises - bone mineral density - vascular health Risk Factor for.. - obesity - some cancers
Study: Sedentary time in adults and the association with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and death
- 18 studies, 794,577 participants
- compared “greatest sedentary time with “lowest”
What is a Telomere?
- the highly repetitive end segment or terminator of a DNA chain that functions as a cap
- telomeres stop chromosomes from fraying, clumping together and scrambling genetic code–lifespan is linked to their length
- scientists have found that the less time people spend sitting, the longer their telomeres
How many hours a day are Canadian adults sedentary?
9.7 hours
What does a sensor do?
- picks up the amplitude and frequency of movement -> produces an electrical current of various magnitude
- stores the information as activity counts-> converted to AEE/METS based on default or predetermined cut points
What is an “active couch potato”?
- an individual who meets physical activity guidelines but spends most of the day being sedentary
Study: Physical activity of Canadian adults: Accelerometer results from the 2007 to 2009 Canadian Health Measures Survey
- 15% adults accumulate 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous pa per week
Why is getting people to exercise failing?
- exercise is not enjoyable
- people do not see immediate benefits form exercise
- exercise is often though of as activity you do at a special facility
- people don’t want to make time for exercise
- exercise may lead to compensatory behaviour
Why is getting poepel to sit less easier?
- sitting less is not unpleasant (in most circumstances)
- strategies doe sitting less can be implemented at any time and almost any place
- extra time doesnt have to be made for istting less
- sitting less leads to more incidental PA
- incidental PA is easier to do than MVPA for most people
How do you reduce your risk?
Interrupt all sedentary behaviour with frequent breaks