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HomeExerciseActivity “Advent calendar” Could Help Boost Activity And Cut Sitting Time

Activity “Advent calendar” Could Help Boost Activity And Cut Sitting Time

Physical activity is an important way to prevent diseases like heart disease and diabetes, yet activity levels remain low in many countries.

The Christmas holidays are a particularly high-risk period for physical inactivity and weight gain, with evidence suggesting that people gain around 0.4-0.9 kg of weight over the holiday season. However, it is unclear how feasible it is to implement a holiday-based activity intervention.

So researchers at Loughborough University carried out a pilot study to test the feasibility and effects of a Christmas-themed physical activity intervention during Advent, designed to boost physical activity levels and cut down sedentary time.

They recruited 107 inactive adults (who did not meet the UK guidelines for physical activity) from social media platforms, workplaces, and community groups between 11 and 30 November 2021. Most (88%) were women of white ethnicity with an average age of 46 years and 56% were overweight or living with obesity.

After collecting baseline data, participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group (71) or the control group (36). 

Intervention participants received a daily email during Advent (1-24 December 2021) containing a Christmas-themed physical activity idea to be completed that day.

Examples included “Star” jumps, “Dasher the reindeer” sprints, “10 lords-a-leaping” rope skips, “Lay the table” planks, and “Rocking around the Christmas tree” Christmas song dances.

Each idea was offered at three intensity levels: Easy Elf (low intensity), Moderate Mrs. Claus (moderate intensity), and Strenuous Santa (high intensity). Participants were free to choose the intensity level of their physical activity each day.

Control participants received a leaflet about healthy living on 1 December.

All participants used an online questionnaire to report how many minutes they spent doing moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity per week and how many days they performed muscle-strengthening exercises per week.

Around half of the participants in both groups were asked to wear an accelerometer (a gadget that tracks the volume and intensity of physical activity) on their wrists 24 hours a day for the duration of the study. 

Intervention participants were also asked to rate their enjoyment of the activity ideas and recount which activity at which intensity they completed each day.

The researchers acknowledge that this was a brief intervention that generated relatively small changes in behavior and being a pilot study, they were unable to report on effectiveness. However, the intervention was safe, inexpensive, and designed to be easily scaled up, and evidence suggests it might have the potential to change health behaviours in the longer term.

Some of the pilot results were that on average, the groups reported similar minutes of participation in moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity in week one and two. 

At week three, the intervention group reported participating in about 21 more minutes of moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity per week and just over half a day more muscle-strengthening exercises per week than the control group.  

Accelerometer data showed that the intervention group participated in similar, although marginally more, minutes per day of moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity (15 minutes), light intensity physical activity (22 minutes), and total physical activity (37 minutes), than the control group over the intervention period. 

On average, people in the intervention group also spent fewer (59 minutes) sedentary per day during the intervention than did people in the control group.

Overall, 42 (70%) of 60 participants in the intervention group reported that they liked the intervention and 41 (69%) of 59 reported that they completed the Active Advent intervention ideas each day. Of these, 18 (30%) completed Easy Elf, 12 (21%) completed Moderate Mrs. Claus, and 11 (18%) completed Strenuous Santa. 

There were no reported safety concerns, although the study was not designed to evaluate this definitively.

“The public were interested to engage in a Christmas-themed physical activity intervention, which also reduced sedentary time and showed promise for increasing participation in physical activity,” write the authors.

“Enjoyment of, and adherence to the intervention shows that the public would welcome public health campaigns to help them become more physically active and less sedentary during the holiday season,” they conclude.

Image: The Active Advent Calendar, figure 1 found https://www.bmj.com/content/379/bmj-2022-072807

As with anything you read on the internet, this article should not be construed as medical advice; please talk to your doctor or primary care provider before changing your wellness routine. This article is not intended to provide a medical diagnosis, recommendation, treatment, or endorsement.

Content may be edited for style and length.

References/Sources/Materials provided by:

mediarelations@bmj.com

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/974705

https://www.bmj.com/content/379/bmj-2022-072807

https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/climb

Article created under a creative license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

 g.j.biddle@lboro.ac.uk

Climb@lboro.ac.uk

Image: The Active Advent Calendar figure 1 found https://www.bmj.com/content/379/bmj-2022-072807

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