Patterns and correlates of physical activity behaviour over 10 years in older adults: prospective analyses from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing
posted on 2015-10-28, 14:30authored byLee Smith, Benjamin Gardner, Abigail Fisher, Mark Hamer
Objective: Few studies have examined how levels of
activity intensity fluctuate throughout later life in older
adults and no study has identified correlates of
sustained activity levels in this age group. The aim of
the present analysis was to investigate stability of
activity over a 10-year period and identify potential
correlates of sustained activity levels in older adults.
Design: Analyses of data from the English
Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Participant-reported
physical activity data were collected in 2002 (baseline),
2004, 2006, 2008, 2010 and 2012. Participant age,
sex, smoking, depressive symptoms, work status,
wealth, and long-standing illness were recorded at
baseline. Multiple logistic regression was used to
examine associations between baseline exposure
variables and persistent physical activity (reporting
moderate and/or vigorous physical activity at least once
a week at all 6 assessments over the 10-year time
period).
Results: A total of 5022 participants (mean age
61 years; 2114 male) were included in the analyses.
There was reasonable stability in the physical activity
measure over the 6 time points (Cronbach’s α 0.85).
There was an overall trend for increasing levels of
inactivity and a reduction in vigorous activity. Age,
female sex, having ever smoked, long-standing illness,
arthritis, obesity, and depressive symptoms were
associated with a lower likelihood of being persistently
active (defined as reporting moderate and/or vigorous
physical activity at least once a week over all 6
assessment points). Those with greater wealth were 4
times more likely to be persistently active.
Conclusions: In the present analyses time spent in
vigorous-intensity activity declined in later life. A range
of sociodemographic and biomedical factors were
associated with being persistently active in older
adults.
Funding
The data was made available through the UK Data Archive. ELSA
was developed by a team of researchers based at University College London,
the Institute of Fiscal Studies and the National Centre for Social Research. The
funding was provided by the National Institute on Ageing in the USA (grants
2R01AG7644-01A1 and 2R01AG017644) and a consortium of UK
government departments coordinated by the Office of National Statistics. LS
was supported by the National Institute for Health Research’s School for
Public Health Research. MH was supported by the British Heart Foundation
(RE/10/005/28296). AF was supported by a Cancer Research UK programme
(grant number C1418/A141).
History
School
Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences
Published in
BMJ Open
Citation
SMITH, L. ... et al., 2015. Patterns and correlates of physical activity behaviour over 10 years in older adults: prospective analyses from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. BMJ Open, 5:e007423 doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2014-007423
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Publication date
2015
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