Controversies in the science of sedentary behaviour and health : insights, perspectives and future directions from the 2018 Queensland Sedentary Behaviour Think Tank

The development in research concerning sedentary behaviour has been rapid over the past two decades. This has led to the development of evidence and views that have become more advanced, diverse and, possibly, contentious. These include the effects of standing, the breaking up of prolonged sitting a...

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Hauptverfasser: Biddle, Stuart J. H, Bennie, Jason A, De Cocker, Katrien, Dunstan, David, Gardiner, Paul A, Healy, Genevieve N, Lynch, Brigid, Owen, Neville, Brakenridge, Charlotte, Brown, Wendy, Buman, Matthew, Clark, Bronwyn, Dohrn, Ing-Mari, Duncan, Mitch, Gilson, Nicholas, Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy, Pavey, Toby, Reid, Natasha, Vandelanotte, Corneel, Vergeer, Ineke, Vincent, Grace E
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creator Biddle, Stuart J. H
Bennie, Jason A
De Cocker, Katrien
Dunstan, David
Gardiner, Paul A
Healy, Genevieve N
Lynch, Brigid
Owen, Neville
Brakenridge, Charlotte
Brown, Wendy
Buman, Matthew
Clark, Bronwyn
Dohrn, Ing-Mari
Duncan, Mitch
Gilson, Nicholas
Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy
Pavey, Toby
Reid, Natasha
Vandelanotte, Corneel
Vergeer, Ineke
Vincent, Grace E
description The development in research concerning sedentary behaviour has been rapid over the past two decades. This has led to the development of evidence and views that have become more advanced, diverse and, possibly, contentious. These include the effects of standing, the breaking up of prolonged sitting and the role of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in the association between sedentary behaviour and health outcomes. The present aim is to report the views of experts (n = 21) brought together (one-day face-to-face meeting in 2018) to consider these issues and provide conclusions and recommendations for future work. Each topic was reviewed and presented by one expert followed by full group discussion, which was recorded, transcribed and analysed. The experts concluded that (a). standing may bring benefits that accrue from postural shifts. Prolonged (mainly static) standing and prolonged sitting are both bad for health; (b). 'the best posture is the next posture'. Regularly breaking up of sitting with postural shifts and movement is vital; (c). health effects of prolonged sitting are evident even after controlling for MVPA, but high levels of MVPA can attenuate the deleterious effects of prolonged sitting depending on the health outcome of interest. Expert discussion addressed measurement, messaging and future directions.
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H ; Bennie, Jason A ; De Cocker, Katrien ; Dunstan, David ; Gardiner, Paul A ; Healy, Genevieve N ; Lynch, Brigid ; Owen, Neville ; Brakenridge, Charlotte ; Brown, Wendy ; Buman, Matthew ; Clark, Bronwyn ; Dohrn, Ing-Mari ; Duncan, Mitch ; Gilson, Nicholas ; Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy ; Pavey, Toby ; Reid, Natasha ; Vandelanotte, Corneel ; Vergeer, Ineke ; Vincent, Grace E</creator><creatorcontrib>Biddle, Stuart J. H ; Bennie, Jason A ; De Cocker, Katrien ; Dunstan, David ; Gardiner, Paul A ; Healy, Genevieve N ; Lynch, Brigid ; Owen, Neville ; Brakenridge, Charlotte ; Brown, Wendy ; Buman, Matthew ; Clark, Bronwyn ; Dohrn, Ing-Mari ; Duncan, Mitch ; Gilson, Nicholas ; Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy ; Pavey, Toby ; Reid, Natasha ; Vandelanotte, Corneel ; Vergeer, Ineke ; Vincent, Grace E</creatorcontrib><description>The development in research concerning sedentary behaviour has been rapid over the past two decades. This has led to the development of evidence and views that have become more advanced, diverse and, possibly, contentious. These include the effects of standing, the breaking up of prolonged sitting and the role of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in the association between sedentary behaviour and health outcomes. The present aim is to report the views of experts (n = 21) brought together (one-day face-to-face meeting in 2018) to consider these issues and provide conclusions and recommendations for future work. Each topic was reviewed and presented by one expert followed by full group discussion, which was recorded, transcribed and analysed. The experts concluded that (a). standing may bring benefits that accrue from postural shifts. Prolonged (mainly static) standing and prolonged sitting are both bad for health; (b). 'the best posture is the next posture'. Regularly breaking up of sitting with postural shifts and movement is vital; (c). health effects of prolonged sitting are evident even after controlling for MVPA, but high levels of MVPA can attenuate the deleterious effects of prolonged sitting depending on the health outcome of interest. 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source PubMed Central Open Access; MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; Ghent University Academic Bibliography; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals; PubMed Central; Free Full-Text Journals in Chemistry
subjects ADULTS
ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY
breaks
CARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE
debate
ENERGY-EXPENDITURE
health
mediation
Medicine and Health Sciences
moderation
OFFICE
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY
posture
PUBLIC-HEALTH
sedentary
SIT-STAND
SITTING
Social Sciences
standing
TELEVISION VIEWING TIME
TIME
title Controversies in the science of sedentary behaviour and health : insights, perspectives and future directions from the 2018 Queensland Sedentary Behaviour Think Tank
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