AbstractObjectiveThe role of sedentary behaviour in metabolically healthy obesity is unknown. We examined cross-sectional differences in television viewing time across metabolic and obesity phenotypes, hypothesizing that healthy obese individuals spend less time viewing television than their unhealthy counterparts.MethodsA nationally representative sample of 4931 older adults in England (mean age 65.1; SD=8.9years) was drawn from the 2008/9 wave of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing. Average weekly television viewing time was derived from two questions about weekday and weekend viewing. Obesity was defined as body mass index≥30kg/m2, and metabolically healthy as having <2 metabolic abnormalities (low HDL-cholesterol, high triglyceride...
Television (TV) viewing is the dominant recreational pastime at all ages, especially for children an...
Background: Research suggests television viewing time may be associated with incident obesity and ce...
Background: Television (TV) viewing time is associated with abnormal glucose metabolism, the metabol...
AbstractObjectiveThe role of sedentary behaviour in metabolically healthy obesity is unknown. We exa...
Objective: Sedentary behaviour may contribute to the development of obesity. We investigated the rel...
BackgroundProspective studies report associations between indicators of time spent sitting and obesi...
AbstractObjectiveA key public health priority is to minimise obesity-related health consequences. We...
Watching TV has been consistently associated with higher risk of adverse health outcomes, but the ef...
1. Sedentary behaviour is not simply a lack of physical activity but is a cluster of individual beha...
Knowledge of sedentary behaviour associations with health has relied mainly on television-viewing as...
National audienceAIM: This study identified the longitudinal associations between leisure-time seden...
Background. Some individuals living with obesity are free from typical cardiometabolic risk factors ...
Objectives It is unclear whether sedentary behaviour, and the domain in which it occurs, is relat...
Objectives This article examines sedentary behaviours (television viewing, computer use and reading)...
Obesity is a risk factor for many chronic diseases and the prevalence is increasing worldwide. Resea...
Television (TV) viewing is the dominant recreational pastime at all ages, especially for children an...
Background: Research suggests television viewing time may be associated with incident obesity and ce...
Background: Television (TV) viewing time is associated with abnormal glucose metabolism, the metabol...
AbstractObjectiveThe role of sedentary behaviour in metabolically healthy obesity is unknown. We exa...
Objective: Sedentary behaviour may contribute to the development of obesity. We investigated the rel...
BackgroundProspective studies report associations between indicators of time spent sitting and obesi...
AbstractObjectiveA key public health priority is to minimise obesity-related health consequences. We...
Watching TV has been consistently associated with higher risk of adverse health outcomes, but the ef...
1. Sedentary behaviour is not simply a lack of physical activity but is a cluster of individual beha...
Knowledge of sedentary behaviour associations with health has relied mainly on television-viewing as...
National audienceAIM: This study identified the longitudinal associations between leisure-time seden...
Background. Some individuals living with obesity are free from typical cardiometabolic risk factors ...
Objectives It is unclear whether sedentary behaviour, and the domain in which it occurs, is relat...
Objectives This article examines sedentary behaviours (television viewing, computer use and reading)...
Obesity is a risk factor for many chronic diseases and the prevalence is increasing worldwide. Resea...
Television (TV) viewing is the dominant recreational pastime at all ages, especially for children an...
Background: Research suggests television viewing time may be associated with incident obesity and ce...
Background: Television (TV) viewing time is associated with abnormal glucose metabolism, the metabol...