Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

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Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers. / De Dominicis, Stefano; Dwyer, Michael John; Ifversen, Simon; Jorgensen, Ida.

2022. Abstract fra 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy, Padua, Italien.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

De Dominicis, S, Dwyer, MJ, Ifversen, S & Jorgensen, I 2022, 'Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers', 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy, Padua, Italien, 11/07/2022 - 16/07/2022. <https://iris.univr.it/handle/11562/1102886>

APA

De Dominicis, S., Dwyer, M. J., Ifversen, S., & Jorgensen, I. (2022). Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers. Abstract fra 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy, Padua, Italien. https://iris.univr.it/handle/11562/1102886

Vancouver

De Dominicis S, Dwyer MJ, Ifversen S, Jorgensen I. Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers. 2022. Abstract fra 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy, Padua, Italien.

Author

De Dominicis, Stefano ; Dwyer, Michael John ; Ifversen, Simon ; Jorgensen, Ida. / Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers. Abstract fra 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy, Padua, Italien.1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{aaeb379e99374a238856ea051f93c29f,
title = "Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers",
abstract = "Evidence suggests that sedentary behaviour is typically associated with poorer mental health. Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic increased physical inactivity and stress worldwide, especially for groups whose daily activities were disrupted, such as office workers. Thus, the present studies aimed to reduce sedentary behaviour and stress in office workers, via a digital behaviour change intervention. In three studies, full-time office workers of different enterprises in Scandinavia were randomly assigned to a 3-to-4-month intervention engaging in active breaks, or a waiting list control group. Randomization was blocked for previous overall physical activity. Univariate repeated-measures mixed ANOVAs and multiple regression models were performed using self-report psychological measures (e.g., perceived stress), physiological and behavioural variables (e.g., resting heart rate, physical activity, measured via a wearable physical activity tracker), as main outcome variables. Overall, the intervention groups, compared to the control groups (time by group effects), were significantly more physically active, improved physiological markers, and reported less stress. We found a viable, agile, and scalable solution to combat sedentary behaviour stress for both in situ and remote office workers. Providing office workers with a pervasive digital solution to empower them to increase their physical activity level by performing active breaks during the workday might be effective in the light of the mental and physical health risks levels that office workers may experience.",
author = "{De Dominicis}, Stefano and Dwyer, {Michael John} and Simon Ifversen and Ida Jorgensen",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
note = "16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy : Sport, exercise and performance psychology: challenges and opportunities in a changing world, FEPSAC 2022 ; Conference date: 11-07-2022 Through 16-07-2022",
url = "https://fepsac2022.eu/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Active breaks: viable solution to reduce stress and improve wellbeing in office workers

AU - De Dominicis, Stefano

AU - Dwyer, Michael John

AU - Ifversen, Simon

AU - Jorgensen, Ida

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Evidence suggests that sedentary behaviour is typically associated with poorer mental health. Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic increased physical inactivity and stress worldwide, especially for groups whose daily activities were disrupted, such as office workers. Thus, the present studies aimed to reduce sedentary behaviour and stress in office workers, via a digital behaviour change intervention. In three studies, full-time office workers of different enterprises in Scandinavia were randomly assigned to a 3-to-4-month intervention engaging in active breaks, or a waiting list control group. Randomization was blocked for previous overall physical activity. Univariate repeated-measures mixed ANOVAs and multiple regression models were performed using self-report psychological measures (e.g., perceived stress), physiological and behavioural variables (e.g., resting heart rate, physical activity, measured via a wearable physical activity tracker), as main outcome variables. Overall, the intervention groups, compared to the control groups (time by group effects), were significantly more physically active, improved physiological markers, and reported less stress. We found a viable, agile, and scalable solution to combat sedentary behaviour stress for both in situ and remote office workers. Providing office workers with a pervasive digital solution to empower them to increase their physical activity level by performing active breaks during the workday might be effective in the light of the mental and physical health risks levels that office workers may experience.

AB - Evidence suggests that sedentary behaviour is typically associated with poorer mental health. Unfortunately, the Covid-19 pandemic increased physical inactivity and stress worldwide, especially for groups whose daily activities were disrupted, such as office workers. Thus, the present studies aimed to reduce sedentary behaviour and stress in office workers, via a digital behaviour change intervention. In three studies, full-time office workers of different enterprises in Scandinavia were randomly assigned to a 3-to-4-month intervention engaging in active breaks, or a waiting list control group. Randomization was blocked for previous overall physical activity. Univariate repeated-measures mixed ANOVAs and multiple regression models were performed using self-report psychological measures (e.g., perceived stress), physiological and behavioural variables (e.g., resting heart rate, physical activity, measured via a wearable physical activity tracker), as main outcome variables. Overall, the intervention groups, compared to the control groups (time by group effects), were significantly more physically active, improved physiological markers, and reported less stress. We found a viable, agile, and scalable solution to combat sedentary behaviour stress for both in situ and remote office workers. Providing office workers with a pervasive digital solution to empower them to increase their physical activity level by performing active breaks during the workday might be effective in the light of the mental and physical health risks levels that office workers may experience.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - 16th European Congress for Sport and Exercise Psychology - FEPSAC 2022, Padua, Italy

Y2 - 11 July 2022 through 16 July 2022

ER -

ID: 320761216