Abstract

We examine the impact of the COVID-19 outbreak and concomitant restrictions (i.e., lockdown) on 24-hour movement behaviors (i.e., physical activity, sitting, sleep) in a purposive sample of people (n = 3230) reporting change recruited online. Participants’ self-reported time spent in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), walking, sitting and sleep prior to lockdown (T1), during the first national lockdown (T2) and as restrictions initially started to ease (T3). For each 24-hour movement behavior, category-shifts are reported (positive, negative or did not change), as well as the percentage of participants recording positive/negative changes across clusters of behaviors and the percentage of participants recording improvement or maintenance of change across time. From T1 to T2 walking decreased, whereas MVPA, sitting and sleep increased, from T2 to T3 levels returned to pre-lockdown for all but MVPA. Participants who changed one behavior positively were more likely to report a positive change in another and 50% of those who reported positive changes from T1 to T2 maintained or improved further when restrictions started to ease. The current study showed that a large proportion of the sample reported positive changes, most notably those displaying initially poor levels of each behavior. These findings will inform salutogenic intervention development.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn Scotland, a nationwide lockdown was announced on the 23rd of March [1]

  • The COVID-19 outbreak has affected people all around the world

  • These results may be related to the type of restrictions put in place, i.e., only being able to leave the house for one hour once a day which would have had an impact on walking, and an increased focus on the promotion of home based physical activity which could have increased moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA)

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Summary

Introduction

In Scotland, a nationwide lockdown was announced on the 23rd of March [1] This meant people were asked to stay at home and only go outside once a day for exercise, shopping for essential items, medical needs or to go to work if their job was vital. On the 28th of May the Scottish Government slowly started easing the lockdown measures meaning greater freedom, people could spend more time outside, meet up with friends and start to travel outside of their local area [2]. These rapid ongoing changes to people’s daily structure are likely to have influenced behavioral outcomes. Whilst emerging research has explored the immediate impact of COVID-19, limited data exists to determine the lasting impact of these ongoing changes on behavioral outcomes

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