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Prospective association between 24-hour movement behaviors and mental health among overweight/obese college students: a compositional data analysis approach

Shuai Wang, Wei Liang, Huiqi Song, Ning Su, Lin Zhou, Yanping Duan, Ryan E. Rhodes, Huaxuan Liu, Yide Yang, Wing Chung Patrick Lau, Julien S. Baker

2023Frontiers in Public Health22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: 24-h movement behaviors, including light physical activity (LPA), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), screen-based sedentary behavior (SSB), non-screen-based sedentary behavior (NSB) and sleep are crucial components affecting mental health. This study aimed to examine the associations of movement behaviors with mental health outcomes among overweight/obese college students using a compositional data analysis approach. Methods: Using a prospective design, 437 Chinese college students (20.1 ± 1.7 years, 51.7% female) completed a two-wave online data collection, where demographics and movement behaviors (LPA, MVPA, SSB, NSB, sleep) were collected at baseline, while depression, anxiety and stress were measured at the 2-month follow-up (Apr-Jul 2022). Compositional data analyses were implemented using R. Results: < 0.001). Reallocating 15 min to MVPA from LPA, SSB and NSB predicted improvements in depression (LPA: -0.234 unit; SSB: -0.375 unit; NSB: -0.249 unit), anxiety (LPA: -0.092 unit; SSB: -0.284 unit; NSB: -0.165 unit), and stress (LPA: -0.083 unit; SSB: -0.312 unit; NSB: -0.191 unit). For dose-response relationships of 5-55 min isotemporal substitution, when time was reallocated to MVPA from LPA, NSB, and SSB, the estimated detriments to mental health were larger in magnitude than the estimated benefits of time reallocation from MVPA to LPA, NSB, and SSB. Conclusion: The findings emphasize the importance of participating in MVPA to improve mental health in overweight/obese college students during the post-COVID-19 era. The compositional analysis produced clear targets for the time allocation of these behaviors for future interventions and policymaking.

Topics & Concepts

OverweightAssociation (psychology)Mental healthObesityProspective cohort studyPsychologyMedicineBody mass indexClinical psychologyGerontologyPsychiatryInternal medicinePsychotherapistPhysical Activity and HealthSleep and related disordersCOVID-19 and Mental Health
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