reviewJournal of Aging and Physical ActivityNov 11, 2014Closed access

How Sedentary Are Older People? A Systematic Review of the Amount of Sedentary Behavior

Glasgow Caledonian University

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Results

349,698 adults aged ≥ 60 within 22 studies (10 countries and 1 EU-wide) were included. Objective measurement of SB shows that older adults spend an average of 9.4 hr a day sedentary, equating to 65-80% of their waking day. Self-report of SB is lower, with average weighted self-reports being 5.3 hr daily. Within specific domains of SB, older adults report 3.3 hr in leisure sitting time and 3.3 hr watching TV. There is an association with more time spent in SB as age advances and a trend for older men to spend more time in SB than women. Conclusion/ implications: Time spent sedentary ranges from 5.3-9.4 hr per waking day in older adults. With recent studies suggesting a link between SB, health, and well-being, independent of physical activity, this is an area important for successful aging.

Limitations

Different methodologies of measurement and different reporting methods of SB made synthesis difficult. Estimated SB time from self-report is half of that measured objectively; suggesting that most self-report surveys of SB will vastly underestimate the actual time spent in SB.

Citation impact

600
total citations
FWCI
12.28
Percentile
100%
References
0
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Sitting
  • Sedentary behavior
  • Gerontology
  • Physical activity
  • Medicine
  • Sedentary lifestyle
  • Population
  • Older people
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