Exposure to simultaneous sedentary behavior domains and sociodemographic factors associated in public servants

  • Fronza F
  • Berria J
  • Minatto G
  • et al.
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Abstract

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/1980-0037.2017v19n4p469 Exposure to sedentary behavior may contribute to health problems. This study aimed to estimate the prevalence of exposure to simultaneous sedentary behavior domains and verify associated sociodemographic characteristics among technical and administrative servers of a Brazilian university. This is a cross-sectional epidemiological study carried out with 623 technical and administrative servers. Sedentary behavior was identified through a questionnaire in the following domains: commuting (active / passive), sitting time at work, daily time spent watching television and computer use (≥3 hours / day). Sociodemographic variables were age, sex and educational level. The prevalence of servers that had one, two, three and four simultaneous sedentary behavior was 28.4%, 43.2%, 22.5% and 4.3%, respectively. Women were more likely to have three sedentary behavior simultaneously (OR = 1.61, CI 95% = 1.02, 2.56). Servers with 9-11 years of schooling were less exposed to two (OR = 0.27, CI 95% = 0.17, 0.44), three (OR = 0.39, CI 95% = 0.23, 0.66) and four (OR = 0.22, CI 95% = 0.07; 0.69) sedentary behavior simultaneously and those over 12 years of schooling were less likely of having two (OR = 0.22, CI 95% = 0.10; 0.49) and three (OR = 0.15, CI 95% = 0.05, 0.46) sedentary behavior simultaneously. More than half of servers have two sedentary behavior during the week. Having sedentary behavior in more than one domain simultaneously was associated with sex and educational level.

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Fronza, F. C., Berria, J., Minatto, G., & Petroski, E. L. (2017). Exposure to simultaneous sedentary behavior domains and sociodemographic factors associated in public servants. Brazilian Journal of Kinanthropometry and Human Performance, 19(4), 469. https://doi.org/10.5007/1980-0037.2017v19n4p469

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