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电视时间与成年人的心脏代谢健康有何关联?观看电视对饮食、运动、情绪和睡眠影响的证据进行批判性系统评价。

How is television time linked to cardiometabolic health in adults? A critical systematic review of the evidence for an effect of watching television on eating, movement, affect and sleep.

机构信息

Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, UK

Department of Anthropology, Durham University, Durham, UK.

出版信息

BMJ Open. 2021 May 5;11(5):e040739. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040739.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To improve our understanding of how television (TV) time is linked to cardiometabolic health among adults by systematically and critically evaluating the evidence that watching TV is associated with increased food consumption, lack of movement or negative affect or affects subsequent sleep.

DESIGN

Systematic review.

DATA SOURCES

Web of Science and PubMed.

ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA

Studies that provided quantitative evidence on short-term associations of watching TV with dietary intake, characteristics of sitting, affect and sleep among samples of healthy adults (≥18 years old).

DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS

Study quality was assessed using the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Quality Assessment Tools; studies deemed to be of low quality were excluded from the review. Due to heterogeneity of study designs and measurements, the findings were synthesised using narrative summary accompanied by custom plots.

RESULTS

We identified 31 studies that met the inclusion criteria. Most of the associations reported by the studies included in this review were weak or inconsistent. There was no strong evidence to suggest that food consumption is higher while watching TV than in other contexts or that TV is a particularly 'sedentary' behaviour. Affect was less likely to be positive while watching TV than in other contexts but was not more likely to be negative. Two small studies suggest that TV may impact sleep via suppressing melatonin and delaying bedtime.

CONCLUSION

There is currently no strong evidence to suggest that TV might impact cardiometabolic health via increasing food consumption, being linked with prolonged/inactive sitting, affect or subsequent sleep. Additional research is required to understand how TV fits within everyday lives and relates to eating, sitting, affect and sleep to improve our understanding of how it might impact cardiometabolic health.

摘要

目的

通过系统和批判性地评估看电视与食物摄入增加、缺乏运动或负面情绪或影响随后睡眠之间关联的证据,提高我们对电视时间与成年人心脏代谢健康之间关系的理解。

设计

系统评价。

资料来源

Web of Science 和 PubMed。

入选标准

提供有关健康成年人(≥18 岁)样本中看电视与饮食摄入、坐姿特征、情绪和睡眠短期关联的定量证据的研究。

资料提取和综合

使用美国国立心肺血液研究所质量评估工具评估研究质量;被认为质量较低的研究被排除在综述之外。由于研究设计和测量的异质性,使用叙述性总结和定制图综合研究结果。

结果

我们确定了 31 项符合纳入标准的研究。本综述中包含的研究报告的大多数关联都很微弱或不一致。没有强有力的证据表明看电视时的食物摄入量高于其他情况下,或者看电视是一种特别“久坐”的行为。与其他情况下相比,看电视时情绪不太可能是积极的,但不太可能更消极。两项小型研究表明,电视可能通过抑制褪黑素和延迟就寝时间来影响睡眠。

结论

目前没有强有力的证据表明电视可能通过增加食物摄入、与长时间/不活动坐姿、情绪或随后的睡眠相关来影响心脏代谢健康。需要进一步的研究来了解电视如何融入日常生活以及与饮食、坐姿、情绪和睡眠的关系,以提高我们对其如何影响心脏代谢健康的理解。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/f388/8103379/861ac48117d5/bmjopen-2020-040739f01.jpg

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