Physical activity, mental health and wellbeing during the first COVID-19 containment in New Zealand: A cross-sectional study
Physical activity, mental health and wellbeing during the first COVID-19 containment in New Zealand: A cross-sectional study
Strategies implemented worldwide to contain COVID-19 outbreaks varied in severity across different countries, and established a new normal for work and school life (i.e., from home) for many people, reducing opportunities for physical activity. Positive relationships of physical activity with both mental and physical health are well recognised, and therefore the aim was to ascertain how New Zealand’s lockdown restrictions impacted physical activity, mental health and wellbeing. Participants (n = 4007; mean ± SD: age 46.5 ± 14.7 years, 72% female, 80.7% New Zealand European) completed (10–26 April 2020) an online amalgamated survey (Qualtrics): International Physical Activity Questionnaire: Short Form; Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-9; World Health Organisation-Five Well-Being Index; Stages of Change Scale. Positive dose–response relationships between physical activity levels and wellbeing scores were demonstrated for estimates that were unadjusted (moderate activity OR 3.79, CI 2.88–4.92; high activity OR 8.04, CI 6.07–10.7) and adjusted (confounding variables: age, gender, socioeconomic status, time sitting and co-morbidities) (moderate activity 1.57, CI 1.11–2.52; high activity 2.85, CI 1.97–4.14). The study results support previous research demonstrating beneficial effects of regular physical activity on mental health and wellbeing. Governments may use these results to promote meeting physical activity guidelines in order to protect mental health and wellbeing during the ongoing COVID-19 restrictions and future pandemics.
O’Brien, Wendy J
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Badenhorst, Claire E
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Draper, Nick
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Basu, Arindam
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Elliot, Catherine A
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Hamlin, Michael J
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Batten, John
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Lambrick, Danielle
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Faulkner, James
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16 November 2021
O’Brien, Wendy J
89551dde-27f4-484b-a420-10f6e24ab42d
Badenhorst, Claire E
d686d1be-bf49-43a9-8e1e-855af1b7acf1
Draper, Nick
b1f95ba7-fd21-4089-b836-94c9d85a3914
Basu, Arindam
ea5719a7-94f5-41b5-a6e1-f511760510a8
Elliot, Catherine A
22bf4c16-6d48-4b0e-b8f1-6f254747db48
Hamlin, Michael J
0c52e9a4-6d8a-4237-b502-4853ce9cdfe3
Batten, John
147e6c5e-6010-4c5b-9e74-d9cf95f90b20
Lambrick, Danielle
1deafa4b-acf3-4eff-83c9-f8274e47e993
Faulkner, James
b2bd38c9-667c-42e8-ad1e-6df58d1e3f7a
O’Brien, Wendy J, Badenhorst, Claire E, Draper, Nick, Basu, Arindam, Elliot, Catherine A, Hamlin, Michael J, Batten, John, Lambrick, Danielle and Faulkner, James
(2021)
Physical activity, mental health and wellbeing during the first COVID-19 containment in New Zealand: A cross-sectional study.
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18 (22), [12036].
(doi:10.3390/ijerph182212036).
Abstract
Strategies implemented worldwide to contain COVID-19 outbreaks varied in severity across different countries, and established a new normal for work and school life (i.e., from home) for many people, reducing opportunities for physical activity. Positive relationships of physical activity with both mental and physical health are well recognised, and therefore the aim was to ascertain how New Zealand’s lockdown restrictions impacted physical activity, mental health and wellbeing. Participants (n = 4007; mean ± SD: age 46.5 ± 14.7 years, 72% female, 80.7% New Zealand European) completed (10–26 April 2020) an online amalgamated survey (Qualtrics): International Physical Activity Questionnaire: Short Form; Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-9; World Health Organisation-Five Well-Being Index; Stages of Change Scale. Positive dose–response relationships between physical activity levels and wellbeing scores were demonstrated for estimates that were unadjusted (moderate activity OR 3.79, CI 2.88–4.92; high activity OR 8.04, CI 6.07–10.7) and adjusted (confounding variables: age, gender, socioeconomic status, time sitting and co-morbidities) (moderate activity 1.57, CI 1.11–2.52; high activity 2.85, CI 1.97–4.14). The study results support previous research demonstrating beneficial effects of regular physical activity on mental health and wellbeing. Governments may use these results to promote meeting physical activity guidelines in order to protect mental health and wellbeing during the ongoing COVID-19 restrictions and future pandemics.
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 November 2021
Published date: 16 November 2021
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Local EPrints ID: 497245
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497245
ISSN: 1660-4601
PURE UUID: 7889777d-3ad8-42d4-a6a4-08543b737247
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Date deposited: 16 Jan 2025 17:46
Last modified: 17 Jan 2025 03:22
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Author:
Wendy J O’Brien
Author:
Claire E Badenhorst
Author:
Nick Draper
Author:
Arindam Basu
Author:
Catherine A Elliot
Author:
Michael J Hamlin
Author:
John Batten
Author:
James Faulkner
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