焦虑
心理健康
萧条(经济学)
心理干预
心理学
人口
生活质量(医疗保健)
临床心理学
精神科
老年学
医学
环境卫生
宏观经济学
护理部
经济
作者
Felix S. Hussenoeder,Ines Conrad,Alexander Pabst,Christoph Engel,Silke Zachariae,Samira Zeynalova,Heide Glaesmer,Andreas Hinz,A. Veronica Witte,Georg Schomerus,Markus Löffler,Arno Villringer,Christian Sander,Steffi G. Riedel‐Heller
标识
DOI:10.1080/13548506.2022.2159453
摘要
While there are studies connecting everyday physical activity (PA) to mental health, they mostly use self-report measures for PA which are biased in multiple ways. Nevertheless, a realistic assessment of everyday PA is important for the development and implementation of low-threshold public health interventions. Therefore, we want to analyze the relationship between objectively measured daily steps and mental health. We included 1451 subjects from a subsample of the population-based LIFE-Adult-Study (2011-2014) with an average age of 55.0 years, 52.1% were female. We analyzed the effects of PA (step count measured via SenseWear Pro 3) on depression (CES-D), anxiety (GAD-7), and quality of sleep (PSQI). The regression analysis showed a significant negative association between low to moderate PA [Incidence rate ratio: 0.87 (0.77; 0.98)] as well as high to very high PA [0.84 (0.74; 0.95)] and depression and no significant associations between PA and anxiety [l-m: 0.98 (0.81; 1.18)/h-vh: 1.00 (0.82; 1.21)] or quality of sleep [l-m: 0.94 (0.84, 1.06)/h-vh: 0.92 (0.82, 1.03)], controlling for sociodemographic variables and personality. Low-threshold interventions that increase daily step count could be a useful approach for the prevention of depression. The use of objective PA measurement for research is highly encouraged.
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