Daily Variability in Sedentary Behaviour and Physical Activity Responsiveness in Older Women
Dale M. Grant, David J. Tomlinson, Kostas Tsintzas, Gladys L. Onambele-Pearson

TL;DR
Older women with consistent daily activity patterns responded better to interventions aimed at reducing sedentary behavior.
Contribution
The study shows that baseline regularity in physical behavior predicts responsiveness to interventions targeting sedentary behavior.
Findings
Participants with high baseline regularity showed greater reductions in sedentary behavior.
Those with high regularity also increased average physical activity bout length after the intervention.
Abstract
Free-living physical behaviour (PB), from sedentarism through to vigorous physical activity (PA), is increasingly studied due to its links to health outcomes. However, it remains unclear whether pre-existing day-to-day regularity in certain PB patterns influences intervention responsiveness. Therefore, this study hypothesized that (1) inter-day variability in certain PBs would decrease following a sedentary behaviour (SB) reduction intervention, and (2) those with high inter-day variability (low regularity) at baseline would be less likely to alter their behaviour compared to those with low inter-day variability (high regularity). Thirty-six older women (73 ± 5 years) were allocated to one of three groups: (1) daily SB fragmentation (SBF) (n = 14), (2) single daily bout of continuous light-intensity PA/LIPA (n = 14), or (3) control (n = 8), where no instructions vis-à-vis altering daily…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Health and Wellbeing Research
