Health Analysis Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.
Centre for Surveillance and Applied Research, Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention Branch, Public Health Agency of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.
Health Rep. 2022 Oct 19;33(10):14-27. doi: 10.25318/82-003-x202201000002-eng.
The new Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Adults aged 18-64 years and Adults aged 65 years and older recommend that adults limit daily sedentary time to eight hours or less, including three hours or less of recreational screen time. The eight-hour recommendation was centred between the evidence from research using self-reported sitting time (threshold: seven hours or less per day) and accelerometer-measured sedentary time (threshold: nine hours or less per day). The purpose of this study is to compare the percentages of Canadians meeting three different sedentary thresholds (three hours or less per day of screen time, seven hours or less per day of self-reported sitting time and nine hours or less per day of accelerometer-measured sedentary time).
This analysis is based on 2,511 adults (aged 18 to 79 years) from Cycle 3 of the Canadian Health Measures Survey, in 2012 and 2013. Screen time and sitting time were assessed via self-report, and average daily sedentary time was assessed using a hip-worn Actical accelerometer.
Adults self-reported an average daily screen time of 3.2 hours (95% confidence interval [CI]: 3.0 to 3.5) and an average daily sitting time of 5.7 hours (95% CI: 5.4 to 6.0). According to accelerometry data, adults accumulated an average of 9.8 hours per day (95% CI: 9.7 to 9.9) of sedentary time. Adherence varied, with 57.7% meeting the self-reported recreational screen time threshold of three hours or less per day, 71.7% meeting the self-reported sitting time threshold of seven hours or less per day and 26.5% meeting the accelerometer-measured sedentary time threshold of nine hours or less per day.
The percentage of Canadian adults meeting the three different sedentary behaviour thresholds varied widely. The findings in this article highlight the difference in sedentary time between what Canadians report versus what is measured by an accelerometer.
加拿大新的 24 小时运动指南建议 18-64 岁成年人和 65 岁及以上老年人每天限制久坐时间不超过 8 小时,包括不超过 3 小时的娱乐性屏幕时间。8 小时的建议是基于使用自我报告的久坐时间(阈值:每天不超过 7 小时)和加速度计测量的久坐时间(阈值:每天不超过 9 小时)的研究证据得出的。本研究的目的是比较加拿大成年人满足三个不同久坐时间阈值(每天不超过 3 小时的屏幕时间、每天不超过 7 小时的自我报告的久坐时间和每天不超过 9 小时的加速度计测量的久坐时间)的百分比。
本分析基于 2012 年和 2013 年加拿大健康测量调查第 3 周期的 2511 名成年人(年龄在 18 至 79 岁之间)。通过自我报告评估屏幕时间和久坐时间,使用佩戴在臀部的 Actical 加速度计评估平均每日久坐时间。
成年人自我报告的平均每日屏幕时间为 3.2 小时(95%置信区间[CI]:3.0 至 3.5),平均每日久坐时间为 5.7 小时(95% CI:5.4 至 6.0)。根据加速度计数据,成年人平均每天积累 9.8 小时(95% CI:9.7 至 9.9)的久坐时间。遵守情况各不相同,57.7%的人符合每天不超过 3 小时的自我报告娱乐性屏幕时间阈值,71.7%的人符合每天不超过 7 小时的自我报告久坐时间阈值,26.5%的人符合每天不超过 9 小时的加速度计测量的久坐时间阈值。
满足三个不同久坐行为阈值的加拿大成年人的百分比差异很大。本文的研究结果突出了加拿大人报告的久坐时间与加速度计测量的久坐时间之间的差异。