Attitudes to ageing and objectively measured sedentary and walking behaviour in older people: the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936
Attitudes to ageing and objectively measured sedentary and walking behaviour in older people: the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936
Background:
Prolonged sitting and low activity—both common in older people—are associated with increased mortality and poorer health. Whether having a more negative attitude to ageing is associated with higher levels of these behaviours is unclear.
Objective:
We investigated the prospective relationship between attitudes to ageing and objectively measured sedentary and walking behaviour.
Methods:
Participants were 271 members of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936. At age 72 years, participants completed the Attitudes to Ageing Questionnaire which assesses attitudes on three domains—Psychosocial loss, Physical change and Psychological growth. At age 79 years, participants wore an activPAL activity monitor for seven days. The outcome measures were average daily time spent sedentary, number of sit-to-stand transitions, and step count.
Results:
There were no significant associations between any of the Attitude to Ageing domain scores and time spent sedentary or number of sit-to-stand transitions. In sex-adjusted analysis, having a more positive attitude to ageing as regards Physical change was associated with a slightly higher daily step count, for a SD increment in score, average daily step count was greater by 1.5% (95% CI 0.6%, 2.4%). On further adjustment for potential confounding factors these associations were no longer significant.
Conclusion:
We found no evidence that attitudes to ageing at age 72 were predictive of sedentary or walking behaviour seven years later. Future studies should examine whether attitudes to ageing are associated with objectively measured walking or sedentary behaviour at the same point in time. The existence of such an association could inform the development of interventions.
Gale, Catharine
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Cukic, Iva
546f2fac-b845-444a-a76b-47ca159be123
Chastin, Sebastian F.
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Dall, Phillipa M.
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Dontje, Manon L.
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Skelton, Dawn A.
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Deary, Ian J.
67e427d0-1022-41f8-807f-4a8dac6e01f8
Gale, Catharine
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Cukic, Iva
546f2fac-b845-444a-a76b-47ca159be123
Chastin, Sebastian F.
b70ffc9a-5746-4a05-bbf1-1bb33760a82d
Dall, Phillipa M.
d3cc3e72-70aa-4c53-90ec-7212f5b78cb8
Dontje, Manon L.
9e40ca02-1844-479e-8caf-e24e63d704cb
Skelton, Dawn A.
531ca71e-d164-4257-94d1-38c57d4887a4
Deary, Ian J.
67e427d0-1022-41f8-807f-4a8dac6e01f8
Gale, Catharine, Cukic, Iva, Chastin, Sebastian F., Dall, Phillipa M., Dontje, Manon L., Skelton, Dawn A. and Deary, Ian J.
,
for the Seniors USP Team
(2018)
Attitudes to ageing and objectively measured sedentary and walking behaviour in older people: the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936.
PLoS ONE, 13 (5), [e0197357].
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0197357).
Abstract
Background:
Prolonged sitting and low activity—both common in older people—are associated with increased mortality and poorer health. Whether having a more negative attitude to ageing is associated with higher levels of these behaviours is unclear.
Objective:
We investigated the prospective relationship between attitudes to ageing and objectively measured sedentary and walking behaviour.
Methods:
Participants were 271 members of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936. At age 72 years, participants completed the Attitudes to Ageing Questionnaire which assesses attitudes on three domains—Psychosocial loss, Physical change and Psychological growth. At age 79 years, participants wore an activPAL activity monitor for seven days. The outcome measures were average daily time spent sedentary, number of sit-to-stand transitions, and step count.
Results:
There were no significant associations between any of the Attitude to Ageing domain scores and time spent sedentary or number of sit-to-stand transitions. In sex-adjusted analysis, having a more positive attitude to ageing as regards Physical change was associated with a slightly higher daily step count, for a SD increment in score, average daily step count was greater by 1.5% (95% CI 0.6%, 2.4%). On further adjustment for potential confounding factors these associations were no longer significant.
Conclusion:
We found no evidence that attitudes to ageing at age 72 were predictive of sedentary or walking behaviour seven years later. Future studies should examine whether attitudes to ageing are associated with objectively measured walking or sedentary behaviour at the same point in time. The existence of such an association could inform the development of interventions.
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2018
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 420919
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/420919
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 84a62294-e83d-4629-9200-323986937680
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Date deposited: 18 May 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:49
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Contributors
Author:
Iva Cukic
Author:
Sebastian F. Chastin
Author:
Phillipa M. Dall
Author:
Manon L. Dontje
Author:
Dawn A. Skelton
Author:
Ian J. Deary
Corporate Author: for the Seniors USP Team
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