Abstract
Purpose: To investigate if persons with high physical activity at work have the same benefits from leisure time physical activity as persons with sedentary work. Methods: In the Copenhagen City Heart Study, a prospective cohort of 7,411 males and 8,916 females aged 25-66 years without known cardiovascular disease at entry in 1976-78, 1981-83, 1991-94, or 2001-03, the authors analyzed with sex-stratified multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression the association between leisure time physical activity and cardiovascular and all-cause mortality among individuals with different levels of occupational physical activity. Results: During a median follow-up of 22.4 years, 4,003 individuals died from cardiovascular disease and 8,935 from all-causes. Irrespective of level of occupational physical activity, a consistently lower risk with increasing leisure time physical activity was found for both cardiovascular and all-cause mortality among both men and women. Compared to low leisure time physical activity, the survival benefit ranged from 1.5-3.6 years for moderate and 2.6-4.7 years for high leisure time physical activity among the different levels of occupational physical activity. Conclusion: Public campaigns and initiatives for increasing physical activity in the working population should target everybody, irrespective of physical activity at work. © 2013 Holtermann et al.
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CITATION STYLE
Holtermann, A., Marott, J. L., Gyntelberg, F., Søgaard, K., Suadicani, P., Mortensen, O. S., … Schnohr, P. (2013). Does the Benefit on Survival from Leisure Time Physical Activity Depend on Physical Activity at Work? A Prospective Cohort Study. PLoS ONE, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0054548
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