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. 2020 Sep 29;20:101213. doi: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2020.101213

Table 2.

Associations between 24-hour movement behaviors and psychological distress in workers (n = 1095).

Model 1a
Model 2b
Odds ratiod 95% CI
p-valuee Odds ratiod 95% CI
p-valuee
Lower Upper Lower Upper
Behaviors in workdayc
Sleep 0.17 0.08 0.34 <0.001 0.20 0.10 0.44 <0.001
SB 2.12 1.22 3.70 0.008 2.28 1.23 4.28 0.010
LPA 2.73 1.84 4.09 <0.001 2.45 1.46 4.17 <0.001
MVPA 1.03 0.70 1.52 0.898 0.87 0.56 1.35 0.536
Overall <0.001 <0.001
Behaviors in non-workdayc
Sleep 0.85 0.46 1.58 0.605 0.71 0.37 1.38 0.311
SB 1.13 0.72 1.77 0.587 1.22 0.75 1.97 0.427
LPA 1.31 0.87 1.98 0.205 1.37 0.87 2.17 0.181
MVPA 0.79 0.64 0.99 0.044 0.84 0.66 1.08 0.170
Overall 0.186 0.334

The results in bold are significant (p < 0.05).

a

Model 1 included composition of 24-hour movement behaviors.

b

Model 2 additionally included age, sex, body mass index, education years, self-rated economic status, marital status, health behaviors (alcohol consumption and smoking), job-type, hiring status, and average weekly overtime hours.

c

Time-use composition was expressed as isometric log ratio (ilr) coordinates, and each result was from the initial ilr coordinates.

d

The odds ratio corresponds to one unit increase in ilr coordinates. Low psychological distress was the reference category.

e

p-values for individual ilr coordinates are from Wald tests, p-value for the overall composition is from the likelihood ratio test.