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Trends in Meeting the Physical Activity Guidelines: Muscle-Strengthening Alone and Combined With Aerobic Activity, United States, 1998–2018

Eric T. Hyde, Geoffrey P. Whitfield, John D. Omura, Janet E. Fulton, Susan A. Carlson

2021Journal of Physical Activity and Health93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The National Health Interview Survey is unique among US federal surveillance systems with over 20 years of consistent assessment of muscle-strengthening and aerobic activity. The authors examined trends in the prevalence of US adults who met the muscle-strengthening (2 or more days per week) and the combined muscle-strengthening and aerobic physical activity (at least 150 min/wk of moderate-intensity equivalent activity) guidelines from 1998 to 2018. METHODS: The 1998-2018 National Health Interview Survey data were analyzed. Age-adjusted prevalence of meeting the muscle-strengthening and combined aerobic and muscle-strengthening guidelines by selected respondent characteristics were estimated for each year and linear and higher-order trends were assessed. RESULTS: From 1998 to 2018, prevalence of meeting the muscle-strengthening guideline increased from 17.7% to 27.6%, and meeting the combined aerobic and muscle-strengthening guidelines increased from 14.4% to 24.0%. All subgroups demonstrated significant increases in meeting both guideline measures over this period although trends varied across the 21 years; increasing trends were more commonly sustained in the second decade of monitoring. CONCLUSIONS: Although increasing trends in prevalence of meeting the muscle-strengthening and combined guidelines are encouraging, current prevalence estimates remain low. Opportunities exist for the continued promotion of muscle-strengthening activity using evidence-based approaches.

Topics & Concepts

Aerobic exerciseRespondentMedicineGuidelinePromotion (chess)Health promotionPhysical activityPhysical therapyEnvironmental healthPublic healthNursingPolitical sciencePathologyPoliticsLawNutrition and Health in AgingPhysical Activity and HealthSports injuries and prevention