Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.

Weather is a potentially important determinant of physical activity. Little work has been done examining the relationship between weather and physical activity, and potential modifiers of any relationship in older people. We therefore examined the relationship between weather and physical activity i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Miles D Witham, Peter T Donnan, Thenmalar Vadiveloo, Falko F Sniehotta, Iain K Crombie, Zhiqiang Feng, Marion E T McMurdo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3907400?pdf=render
id doaj-0a10ac9acab74775a188e3e53fdde46e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0a10ac9acab74775a188e3e53fdde46e2020-11-24T21:49:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0191e8533110.1371/journal.pone.0085331Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.Miles D WithamPeter T DonnanThenmalar VadivelooFalko F SniehottaIain K CrombieZhiqiang FengMarion E T McMurdoWeather is a potentially important determinant of physical activity. Little work has been done examining the relationship between weather and physical activity, and potential modifiers of any relationship in older people. We therefore examined the relationship between weather and physical activity in a cohort of older community-dwelling people.We analysed prospectively collected cross-sectional activity data from community-dwelling people aged 65 and over in the Physical Activity Cohort Scotland. We correlated seven day triaxial accelerometry data with daily weather data (temperature, day length, sunshine, snow, rain), and a series of potential effect modifiers were tested in mixed models: environmental variables (urban vs rural dwelling, percentage of green space), psychological variables (anxiety, depression, perceived behavioural control), social variables (number of close contacts) and health status measured using the SF-36 questionnaire.547 participants, mean age 78.5 years, were included in this analysis. Higher minimum daily temperature and longer day length were associated with higher activity levels; these associations remained robust to adjustment for other significant associates of activity: age, perceived behavioural control, number of social contacts and physical function. Of the potential effect modifier variables, only urban vs rural dwelling and the SF-36 measure of social functioning enhanced the association between day length and activity; no variable modified the association between minimum temperature and activity.In older community dwelling people, minimum temperature and day length were associated with objectively measured activity. There was little evidence for moderation of these associations through potentially modifiable health, environmental, social or psychological variables.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3907400?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Miles D Witham
Peter T Donnan
Thenmalar Vadiveloo
Falko F Sniehotta
Iain K Crombie
Zhiqiang Feng
Marion E T McMurdo
spellingShingle Miles D Witham
Peter T Donnan
Thenmalar Vadiveloo
Falko F Sniehotta
Iain K Crombie
Zhiqiang Feng
Marion E T McMurdo
Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Miles D Witham
Peter T Donnan
Thenmalar Vadiveloo
Falko F Sniehotta
Iain K Crombie
Zhiqiang Feng
Marion E T McMurdo
author_sort Miles D Witham
title Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
title_short Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
title_full Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
title_fullStr Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
title_full_unstemmed Association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
title_sort association of day length and weather conditions with physical activity levels in older community dwelling people.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Weather is a potentially important determinant of physical activity. Little work has been done examining the relationship between weather and physical activity, and potential modifiers of any relationship in older people. We therefore examined the relationship between weather and physical activity in a cohort of older community-dwelling people.We analysed prospectively collected cross-sectional activity data from community-dwelling people aged 65 and over in the Physical Activity Cohort Scotland. We correlated seven day triaxial accelerometry data with daily weather data (temperature, day length, sunshine, snow, rain), and a series of potential effect modifiers were tested in mixed models: environmental variables (urban vs rural dwelling, percentage of green space), psychological variables (anxiety, depression, perceived behavioural control), social variables (number of close contacts) and health status measured using the SF-36 questionnaire.547 participants, mean age 78.5 years, were included in this analysis. Higher minimum daily temperature and longer day length were associated with higher activity levels; these associations remained robust to adjustment for other significant associates of activity: age, perceived behavioural control, number of social contacts and physical function. Of the potential effect modifier variables, only urban vs rural dwelling and the SF-36 measure of social functioning enhanced the association between day length and activity; no variable modified the association between minimum temperature and activity.In older community dwelling people, minimum temperature and day length were associated with objectively measured activity. There was little evidence for moderation of these associations through potentially modifiable health, environmental, social or psychological variables.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3907400?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT milesdwitham associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT petertdonnan associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT thenmalarvadiveloo associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT falkofsniehotta associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT iainkcrombie associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT zhiqiangfeng associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
AT marionetmcmurdo associationofdaylengthandweatherconditionswithphysicalactivitylevelsinoldercommunitydwellingpeople
_version_ 1725888911611265024