Projects per year
Abstract / Description of output
Background and Objectives: Sitting less can reduce older adults' risk of ill health and disability. Effective sedentary behavior interventions require greater understanding of what older adults do when sitting (and not sitting), and why. This study compares the types, context, and role of sitting activities in the daily lives of older men and women who sit more or less than average.
Research Design and Methods: Semistructured interviews with 44 older men and women of different ages, socioeconomic status, and objectively measured sedentary behavior were analyzed using social practice theory to explore the multifactorial, inter-relational influences on their sedentary behavior. Thematic frameworks facilitated between-group comparisons.
Results: Older adults described many different leisure time, household, transport, and occupational sitting and non-sitting activities. Leisure-time sitting in the home (e.g., watching TV) was most common, but many non-sitting activities, including "pottering" doing household chores, also took place at home. Other people and access to leisure facilities were associated with lower sedentary behavior. The distinction between being busy/not busy was more important to most participants than sitting/not sitting, and informed their judgments about high-value "purposeful" (social, cognitively active, restorative) sitting and low-value "passive" sitting. Declining physical function contributed to temporal sitting patterns that did not vary much from day-to-day.
Discussion and Implications: Sitting is associated with cognitive, social, and/or restorative benefits, embedded within older adults' daily routines, and therefore difficult to change. Useful strategies include supporting older adults to engage with other people and local facilities outside the home, and break up periods of passive sitting at home.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 686-697 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Gerontologist |
Volume | 59 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 15 May 2018 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2019 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- qualitative
- social practice model
- ecological model
- intervention
- experiences
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'What do older people do when sitting and why? Implications for decreasing sedentary behavior'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 4 Finished
-
-
Brain imaging and cognitive ageing in the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: III
Wardlaw, J., Bastin, M. & Deary, I.
1/05/15 → 30/04/19
Project: Research
-
RA2661 Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology Phase 2. Main Budget.
Deary, I., Gale, C., Holmes, M., Logie, P., Maclullich, A., Porteous, D., Seckl, J., Starr, J., Wardlaw, J. & Okely, J.
1/09/13 → 31/08/19
Project: Research
Profiles
-
Ian Deary
- School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences - Professorial Fellow
- Edinburgh Neuroscience
- Edinburgh Imaging
Person: Academic: Research Active
-
Claire Fitzsimons
- Moray House School of Education and Sport - Senior Lecturer
- Physical Activity for Health Research Centre
- Institute for Sport, Physical Education and Health Sciences
Person: Academic: Research Active