Changes in the 24-h movement behaviors during the transition to retirement: compositional data analysis

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Abstract

Background: Transition to retirement is shown to affect sleep, sedentary time and physical activity, but no previous studies have examined how retirement changes the distribution of time spent daily in these movement behaviors. The aim of this study was to examine longitudinally how the composition of 24-h movement behaviors changes during the transition to retirement using compositional data analysis (CoDA). Methods: We included 551 retiring public sector workers (mean age 63.2 years, standard deviation 1.1) from the Finnish Retirement and Aging study. The study participants wore a wrist-worn ActiGraph accelerometer for one week 24 h per day before and after retirement, with one year between the measurements. The daily proportions to time spent sleeping, in sedentary behavior (SED), light physical activity (LPA) and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) were estimated using the GGIR package. Changes in the daily proportions of movement behaviors were examined using Compositional Data Analysis version of linear mixed models. Results: In general, the proportion of time spent in active behaviors decreased relative to time spent in passive behaviors after retirement (p

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Suorsa, K., Leskinen, T., Pasanen, J., Pulakka, A., Myllyntausta, S., Pentti, J., … Stenholm, S. (2022). Changes in the 24-h movement behaviors during the transition to retirement: compositional data analysis. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12966-022-01364-3

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