School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Newcastle, 2308, Australia.
Hunter New England Population Health, Locked Bag 10, Wallsend, NSW, 2287, Australia.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2020 Sep 3;17(1):111. doi: 10.1186/s12966-020-01008-4.
Prolonged sitting time is a risk factor for chronic disease, yet recent global surveillance is not well described. The aims were to clarify: (i) the countries that have collected country-level data on self-reported sitting time; (ii) the single-item tools used to collect these data; and (iii) the duration of sitting time reported across low- to high-income countries.
Country-level data collected within the last 10 years using single-item self-report were included. The six-stage methodology: (1) reviewing Global Observatory for Physical Activity! Country Cards; (2-4) country-specific searches of PubMed, the Demographic and Health Survey website and Google; (5) analysing the Eurobarometer 88.4; and (6) country-specific searches for World Health Organization STEPwise reports.
A total of 7641 records were identified and screened for eligibility. Sixty-two countries (29%) reported sitting time representing 47% of the global adult population. The majority of data were from high-income (61%) and middle income (29%) countries. The tools used were the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ; n = 34), a modified IPAQ (n = 1) or the Global Physical Activity Questionnaire (GPAQ; n = 27). The median of mean daily sitting times was 4.7 (IQR: 3.5-5.1) hours across all countries. Higher-income countries recorded a longer duration of sitting time than lower-income countries (4.9 vs 2.7 h).
This study provides an updated collation of countries collecting self-reported sitting time data. The daily sitting time findings should be interpreted cautiously. Current surveillance of sitting time is limited by a lack of coverage. Measures of population sitting time that are valid, feasible and sensitive to change should be embedded within global surveillance systems, to help guide future policy, research and practice.
Not applicable.
久坐时间过长是慢性病的一个危险因素,但最近的全球监测情况还不太清楚。本研究旨在明确:(i) 已收集关于自我报告久坐时间的国家;(ii) 用于收集这些数据的单一工具;以及 (iii) 中低收入国家报告的久坐时间持续时间。
纳入了在过去 10 年中使用单一项目自我报告收集的国家层面数据。使用六阶段方法:(1) 审查全球身体活动观察站!国家卡片;(2-4) 在 PubMed、人口与健康调查网站和 Google 上进行特定国家搜索;(5) 分析欧洲民意调查 88.4;(6) 针对世界卫生组织 STEPWISE 报告进行特定国家搜索。
共确定并筛选了 7641 条记录,以确定其是否符合条件。62 个国家(29%)报告了久坐时间,占全球成年人口的 47%。大部分数据来自高收入(61%)和中等收入(29%)国家。使用的工具是国际体力活动问卷 (IPAQ;n=34)、修改后的 IPAQ(n=1)或全球体力活动问卷 (GPAQ;n=27)。所有国家的平均每日久坐时间中位数为 4.7(四分位距:3.5-5.1)小时。高收入国家的久坐时间比低收入国家长(4.9 比 2.7 小时)。
本研究提供了一份更新的收集自我报告久坐时间数据的国家清单。这些关于每日久坐时间的发现应谨慎解读。目前对久坐时间的监测受到覆盖范围有限的限制。应在全球监测系统中嵌入对人群久坐时间具有有效性、可行性和敏感性的测量方法,以帮助指导未来的政策、研究和实践。
不适用。