Steps and sitting in a working population


Autoria(s): Miller, R.; Brown, W.
Contribuinte(s)

U. Lundberg

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

This study aimed to assess sitting time and number of steps taken each day, and the relationships between these variables, in a sample of working Australian adults. Workers (N = 185), wore a pedometer for 7 days and recorded the number of steps taken and time spent sitting each day. Average time spent sitting on weekdays was 9.4 (SD = 2.40) hr with about half spent sitting at work. Despite this, the average steps taken each day (M = 8,873, SD = 2,757) was higher on weekdays than on weekend days. There was a clear inverse relationship between sitting time at work and number of steps taken on weekdays, r = -.34, p < .001); those in the highest tertile for sitting time reported about 3,000 fewer daily steps. Workers in managerial and professional occupations reported more time sitting at work (M = 6.2 hr per day) and lower weekday step counts (M = 7,883, N = 43) than technical (M = 3.3 hr sitting at work and 10,731 weekday steps, N = 33) and blue collar workers (M = 1.6 hours sitting and 11,784 steps N = 11). The findings suggest those whose daily work involves long hours of sitting should be the focus of efforts to promote physical activity both within and outside the workplace.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:69790

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lawrence Erlbaum

Palavras-Chave #Sitting #Pedometers #Physical Activity #Occupation #Workers #Physical-activity Questionnaire #Ambulatory Activity #Australian Adults #Reliability #Overweight #Validity #Patterns #Obesity #Time #Psychology, Clinical #C1 #321216 Health Promotion #730301 Health education and promotion
Tipo

Journal Article