Witham Miles D, Donnan Peter T, Vadiveloo Thenmalar, Sniehotta Falko F, Crombie Iain K, Feng Zhiqiang, McMurdo Marion E T
Ageing and Health, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland.
Dundee Epidemiology and Biostatistics Unit, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 30;9(1):e85331. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085331. eCollection 2014.
Weather is a potentially important determinant of physical activity. Little work has been done examining the relationship between weather and physical activity, and potential modifiers of any relationship in older people. We therefore examined the relationship between weather and physical activity in a cohort of older community-dwelling people.
We analysed prospectively collected cross-sectional activity data from community-dwelling people aged 65 and over in the Physical Activity Cohort Scotland. We correlated seven day triaxial accelerometry data with daily weather data (temperature, day length, sunshine, snow, rain), and a series of potential effect modifiers were tested in mixed models: environmental variables (urban vs rural dwelling, percentage of green space), psychological variables (anxiety, depression, perceived behavioural control), social variables (number of close contacts) and health status measured using the SF-36 questionnaire.
547 participants, mean age 78.5 years, were included in this analysis. Higher minimum daily temperature and longer day length were associated with higher activity levels; these associations remained robust to adjustment for other significant associates of activity: age, perceived behavioural control, number of social contacts and physical function. Of the potential effect modifier variables, only urban vs rural dwelling and the SF-36 measure of social functioning enhanced the association between day length and activity; no variable modified the association between minimum temperature and activity.
In older community dwelling people, minimum temperature and day length were associated with objectively measured activity. There was little evidence for moderation of these associations through potentially modifiable health, environmental, social or psychological variables.
天气可能是身体活动的一个重要决定因素。关于天气与身体活动之间的关系以及老年人中任何关系的潜在调节因素,相关研究较少。因此,我们研究了一组社区居住的老年人中天气与身体活动之间的关系。
我们分析了从苏格兰身体活动队列中前瞻性收集的65岁及以上社区居住者的横断面活动数据。我们将七天的三轴加速度计数据与每日天气数据(温度、日照时长、日照、降雪、降雨)进行关联,并在混合模型中测试了一系列潜在的效应修饰因素:环境变量(城市与农村居住、绿地百分比)、心理变量(焦虑、抑郁、感知行为控制)、社会变量(亲密接触者数量)以及使用SF-36问卷测量的健康状况。
本分析纳入了547名参与者,平均年龄78.5岁。每日最低温度较高和日照时长较长与较高的活动水平相关;在对其他重要的活动相关因素进行调整后,这些关联仍然稳健:年龄、感知行为控制、社会接触数量和身体功能。在潜在的效应修饰变量中,只有城市与农村居住以及SF-36社会功能测量增强了日照时长与活动之间的关联;没有变量改变最低温度与活动之间的关联。
在社区居住的老年人中,最低温度和日照时长与客观测量的活动相关。几乎没有证据表明通过潜在可改变的健康、环境、社会或心理变量可以调节这些关联。