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The association between physical activity, sitting time, sleep duration, and sleep quality, as correlates of presenteeism

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Version 2 2022-09-13, 04:18
Version 1 2021-01-16, 12:04
journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-13, 04:18 authored by D Guertler, Corneel VandelanotteCorneel Vandelanotte, Camille Short, Stephanie AlleyStephanie Alley, Stephanie SchoeppeStephanie Schoeppe, Mitchell Duncan
Objective: This study aims to examine the relationship of lifestyle behaviors (physical activity, work and non-work sitting time, sleep quality, and sleep duration) with presenteeism while controlling for sociodemographics, work and health-related variables. Methods: Data were collected from 710 workers (aged 20 to 76 years; 47.9% women) from randomly selected Australian adults who completed an online survey. Linear regression was used to examine the relationship between lifestyle behaviors and presenteeism. Results: Poorer sleep quality (standardized regression coefficients [B] = 0.112; P < 0.05), suboptimal duration (B=0.081; P<0.05), and lower work sitting time (B = −0.086; P < 0.05) were significantly associated with higher presenteeism when controlling for all lifestyle behaviors. Engaging in three risky lifestyle behaviors was associated with higher presenteeism (B = 0.150; P < 0.01) compared with engaging in none or one. Conclusions: The results of this study highlight the importance of sleep behaviors for presenteeism and call for behavioral interventions that simultaneously address sleep in conjunction with other activity-related behaviors.

History

Volume

57

Issue

3

Start Page

321

End Page

328

Number of Pages

8

eISSN

1536-5948

ISSN

1076-2752

Location

USA

Publisher

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

External Author Affiliations

Max-Delbrück-Centrum für Molekulare Medizin; Not affiliated to a Research Institute; School of Human, Health and Social Sciences (2013- ); University of Newcastle;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of occupational and environmental medicine.