posted on 2015-10-28, 14:17authored byJohn P. Buckley, Alan Hedge, Thomas E. Yates, Robert J. Copeland, Michael Loosemore, Mark Hamer, Gavin Bradley, David W. Dunstan
An international group of experts convened to provide
guidance for employers to promote the avoidance of
prolonged periods of sedentary work. The set of
recommendations was developed from the totality of the
current evidence, including long-term epidemiological
studies and interventional studies of getting workers to
stand and/or move more frequently. The evidence was
ranked in quality using the four levels of the American
College of Sports Medicine. The derived guidance is as
follows: for those occupations which are predominantly
desk based, workers should aim to initially progress
towards accumulating 2 h/day of standing and light
activity (light walking) during working hours, eventually
progressing to a total accumulation of 4 h/day (prorated
to part-time hours). To achieve this, seated-based work
should be regularly broken up with standing-based
work, the use of sit–stand desks, or the taking of short
active standing breaks. Along with other health
promotion goals (improved nutrition, reducing alcohol,
smoking and stress), companies should also promote
among their staff that prolonged sitting, aggregated
from work and in leisure time, may significantly and
independently increase the risk of cardiometabolic
diseases and premature mortality. It is appreciated that
these recommendations should be interpreted in relation
to the evidence from which they were derived, largely
observational and retrospective studies, or short-term
interventional studies showing acute cardiometabolic
changes. While longer term intervention studies are
required, the level of consistent evidence accumulated to
date, and the public health context of rising chronic
diseases, suggest initial guidelines are justified. We hope
these guidelines stimulate future research, and that
greater precision will be possible within future iterations.
Funding
Public Health England contributed a small amount of unconditional
funding to help support meetings for the expert panel to prepare and write this
statement, but this neither constitutes an endorsement nor an official opinion of
Public Health England
History
School
Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences
Published in
British Journal of Sports Medicine
Citation
BUCKLEY, J.P. ... et al., 2015. The sedentary office: an expert statement on the growing case for change towards better health and productivity. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 49, pp. 1357-1362.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Publication date
2015
Notes
This article has been accepted for publication in British Journal of Sports Medicine following peer
review. The definitive copyedited, typeset version, BUCKLEY, J.P. ... et al., 2015. The sedentary office: an expert statement on the growing case for change towards better health and productivity. British Journal of Sports Medicine, 49, pp. 1357-1362, is available online at: http://bjsm.bmj.com/content/49/21/1357