Abstract

ObjectiveTo examine the prospective association of patterns of physical activity, sedentary behavior and sleep with health-related quality of life (HRQL) in the general population of Spain. MethodsA cohort study with 4271 individuals aged ≥18years was recruited in 2008–2010 and followed-up prospectively through 2012. Activity patterns were derived from factor analysis. HRQL was assessed with the SF-12 questionnaire, and suboptimal HRQL was defined as a score below the sex-specific sample median. ResultsThree main activity patterns were identified. A higher adherence to the pattern named “vigorous activity-seated at the computer” was inversely associated with a suboptimal score in the physical-composite summary (PCS) of the SF-12 (multivariate adjusted odds ratio [aOR] for the highest vs. the lowest quartile 0.71; 95% confidence interval [IC] 0.55–0.90; p-trend=0.003). The “light activity-seated for reading” pattern was inversely associated with a suboptimal score in the mental-composite summary (aOR=0.73; 95% CI=0.61–0.89; p-trend=0.002). However, a higher adherence to the “seated for watching TV-daytime sleeping” pattern was directly associated with suboptimal PCS (aOR=1.35; 95% CI=1.10–1.66; p-trend=0.008). ConclusionPatterns including any physical activity were associated with better physical or mental HRQL. However, a pattern defined by sedentary behavior with diurnal sleep showed worse HRQL and should be a priority target of preventive interventions.

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