Too Much Sitting Flashcards

1
Q

What is Sedentary Behaviour?

A
  • Any waking behaviour characterized by an energy expenditure < 1.5 metabolic equivalents (METs) while in a sitting or reclining position
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2
Q

What is a MET?

A

one MET is defined as 1kcal/kg/hour and is roughly equivalent to the oxygen cost of sitting quietly

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3
Q

Historial Perspective

A
  • 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
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4
Q

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

A

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

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5
Q

Physical Activity and Mortality: The Potential Impact of Sitting

A
  • 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.
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6
Q

Health Consequences of Sedentarism

A
Compromises
- bone mineral density
- vascular health
Risk Factor for..
- obesity
- some cancers
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7
Q

Study: Sedentary time in adults and the association with diabetes, cardiovascular disease and death

A
  • 18 studies, 794,577 participants

- compared “greatest sedentary time with “lowest”

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8
Q

What is a Telomere?

A
  • 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
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9
Q

How many hours a day are Canadian adults sedentary?

A

9.7 hours

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10
Q

What does a sensor do?

A
  • 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
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11
Q

What is an “active couch potato”?

A
  • an individual who meets physical activity guidelines but spends most of the day being sedentary
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12
Q

Study: Physical activity of Canadian adults: Accelerometer results from the 2007 to 2009 Canadian Health Measures Survey

A
  • 15% adults accumulate 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous pa per week
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13
Q

Why is getting people to exercise failing?

A
  • 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
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14
Q

Why is getting poepel to sit less easier?

A
  • 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
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15
Q

How do you reduce your risk?

A

Interrupt all sedentary behaviour with frequent breaks

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16
Q

Breaks in sedentary time

A
Lower
- waist circumference
- systolic blood pressure
- glucose
- insulin
- triglycerides
Higher
- HDL-cholesterol
17
Q

What is the effectiveness of breaking up sedentary behaviour?

A
  • breaks improve glucose levels and insulin levels
18
Q

How do apple watch’s help to stop sedentary behaviour?

A
  • they sense when you stand move just a bit and give you credit for it
  • if you’ve been sitting for almost an hour, it reminds you to get up
  • you close the stand ring when you’ve stood for at least one minute in 12 different hours during the day.
19
Q

Study: B-Mobline - A Smartphone-Based Intervention to Reduce Sedentary Time in Overweight/Obese Individuals

A

Intervention:
- 3 minute breaks after 30 minutes of sitting
Results:
- 47 minute reduction from 593 of daily sitting (6% reduction)
Conclusion:
- The smartphone-based intervention significantly reduced SED. Prompting frequent short activity breaks is an effective way to decrease SED. Future work should determine whether these SED reductions can be maintained long-term/

20
Q

Study: Evaluation of sit-stand workstations in an office setting: a randomized controlled train

A

Background:
- excessive sitting time is a risk facto for cardiovascular disease mortality and morbidity independent of physical activity. This aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of a sit-stand workstation on sitting time, and vascular, metabolic and musculoskeletal outcomes in office workers, and to investigate workstation acceptability and feasibility
Results:
- intervention group sat much less and stood much more, while the control group did not
Conclusion:
- short-term use of a feasible sit-stand workstation reduced daily sitting time and led to beneficial improvements in cardiometabolic risk parameters in asymtomatic office works. These findings imply that if the observed use of the sit-stand workstations continuied over a longer duration, sit-stand workstations may have important ramifications for the prevention and reduction or cardiometabolic risk in a large proportion of the working population

21
Q

Study: Increasing Non-sedentary Behaviours in University Students Using Text Messages: Randomized Controlled Trial

A

Aim:
- the effectiveness of text messages as a way to reduce sedentary behaviour in university students
- higher break behaviour
- self-efficacy
Methods - Measures
- Demographics
- Self-efficacy and Break Behaviour
- Sedentary and Light Intensity Physical Activity Questionnaire
- Physical Activity Recall
Intervention
- mix of challenges, facts and reminders sent twice daily, and tailored
Control:
- random health/food facts and tips
Results:
- intervention group improved in all behaviours
- plausible intervention
- self-efficacy cognitions correlated well with target behaviours