Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study

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Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study. / Krist, Lilian; Dornquast, Christina; Reinhold, Thomas; Becher, Heiko; Icke, Katja; Danquah, Ina; Willich, Stefan N; Keil, Thomas.

in: INT J ENV RES PUB HE, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 17, 31.08.2020.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Krist, L, Dornquast, C, Reinhold, T, Becher, H, Icke, K, Danquah, I, Willich, SN & Keil, T 2020, 'Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study', INT J ENV RES PUB HE, Jg. 17, Nr. 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176349

APA

Krist, L., Dornquast, C., Reinhold, T., Becher, H., Icke, K., Danquah, I., Willich, S. N., & Keil, T. (2020). Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study. INT J ENV RES PUB HE, 17(17). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176349

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{894391f52a2a446885103955a27dd4e7,
title = "Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study",
abstract = "Physical activity (PA) behavior is increasingly described as trajectories taking changes over a longer period into account. Little is known, however, about predictors of those trajectories among migrant populations. Therefore, the aim of the present cohort study was to describe changes of PA over six years and to explore migration-related and other predictors for different PA trajectories in adults of Turkish descent living in Berlin. At baseline (2011/2012) and after six years, sociodemographics, health behavior, and medical information were assessed. Four PA trajectories were defined using data of weekly PA from baseline and follow-up: {"}inactive{"}, {"}decreasing{"}, {"}increasing{"}, and {"}stable active{"}. Multivariable regression analyses were performed in order to determine predictors for the {"}stable active{"} trajectory, and results were presented as adjusted odds ratios (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). In this analysis, 197 people (60.9% women, mean age ± standard deviation 49.9 ± 12.8 years) were included. A total of 77.7% were first-generation migrants, and 50.5% had Turkish citizenship. The four PA trajectories differed regarding citizenship, preferred questionnaire language, and marital status. {"}Stable active{"} trajectory membership was predicted by educational level (high vs. low: aOR 4.20, 95%CI [1.10; 16.00]), citizenship (German or dual vs. Turkish only: 3.60 [1.20; 10.86]), preferred questionnaire language (German vs. Turkish: 3.35 [1.05; 10.66]), and BMI (overweight vs. normal weight: 0.28 [0.08; 0.99]). In our study, migration-related factors only partially predicted trajectory membership, however, persons with citizenship of their country of origin and/or with poor language skills should be particularly considered when planning PA prevention programs.",
author = "Lilian Krist and Christina Dornquast and Thomas Reinhold and Heiko Becher and Katja Icke and Ina Danquah and Willich, {Stefan N} and Thomas Keil",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
day = "31",
doi = "10.3390/ijerph17176349",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "INT J ENV RES PUB HE",
issn = "1660-4601",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "17",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical Activity Trajectories among Persons of Turkish Descent Living in Germany-A Cohort Study

AU - Krist, Lilian

AU - Dornquast, Christina

AU - Reinhold, Thomas

AU - Becher, Heiko

AU - Icke, Katja

AU - Danquah, Ina

AU - Willich, Stefan N

AU - Keil, Thomas

PY - 2020/8/31

Y1 - 2020/8/31

N2 - Physical activity (PA) behavior is increasingly described as trajectories taking changes over a longer period into account. Little is known, however, about predictors of those trajectories among migrant populations. Therefore, the aim of the present cohort study was to describe changes of PA over six years and to explore migration-related and other predictors for different PA trajectories in adults of Turkish descent living in Berlin. At baseline (2011/2012) and after six years, sociodemographics, health behavior, and medical information were assessed. Four PA trajectories were defined using data of weekly PA from baseline and follow-up: "inactive", "decreasing", "increasing", and "stable active". Multivariable regression analyses were performed in order to determine predictors for the "stable active" trajectory, and results were presented as adjusted odds ratios (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). In this analysis, 197 people (60.9% women, mean age ± standard deviation 49.9 ± 12.8 years) were included. A total of 77.7% were first-generation migrants, and 50.5% had Turkish citizenship. The four PA trajectories differed regarding citizenship, preferred questionnaire language, and marital status. "Stable active" trajectory membership was predicted by educational level (high vs. low: aOR 4.20, 95%CI [1.10; 16.00]), citizenship (German or dual vs. Turkish only: 3.60 [1.20; 10.86]), preferred questionnaire language (German vs. Turkish: 3.35 [1.05; 10.66]), and BMI (overweight vs. normal weight: 0.28 [0.08; 0.99]). In our study, migration-related factors only partially predicted trajectory membership, however, persons with citizenship of their country of origin and/or with poor language skills should be particularly considered when planning PA prevention programs.

AB - Physical activity (PA) behavior is increasingly described as trajectories taking changes over a longer period into account. Little is known, however, about predictors of those trajectories among migrant populations. Therefore, the aim of the present cohort study was to describe changes of PA over six years and to explore migration-related and other predictors for different PA trajectories in adults of Turkish descent living in Berlin. At baseline (2011/2012) and after six years, sociodemographics, health behavior, and medical information were assessed. Four PA trajectories were defined using data of weekly PA from baseline and follow-up: "inactive", "decreasing", "increasing", and "stable active". Multivariable regression analyses were performed in order to determine predictors for the "stable active" trajectory, and results were presented as adjusted odds ratios (aOR) with 95% confidence intervals (95%CI). In this analysis, 197 people (60.9% women, mean age ± standard deviation 49.9 ± 12.8 years) were included. A total of 77.7% were first-generation migrants, and 50.5% had Turkish citizenship. The four PA trajectories differed regarding citizenship, preferred questionnaire language, and marital status. "Stable active" trajectory membership was predicted by educational level (high vs. low: aOR 4.20, 95%CI [1.10; 16.00]), citizenship (German or dual vs. Turkish only: 3.60 [1.20; 10.86]), preferred questionnaire language (German vs. Turkish: 3.35 [1.05; 10.66]), and BMI (overweight vs. normal weight: 0.28 [0.08; 0.99]). In our study, migration-related factors only partially predicted trajectory membership, however, persons with citizenship of their country of origin and/or with poor language skills should be particularly considered when planning PA prevention programs.

U2 - 10.3390/ijerph17176349

DO - 10.3390/ijerph17176349

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 32878214

VL - 17

JO - INT J ENV RES PUB HE

JF - INT J ENV RES PUB HE

SN - 1660-4601

IS - 17

ER -