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Salud Pública de México
versión impresa ISSN 0036-3634
Salud pública Méx vol.56 no.6 Cuernavaca nov./dic. 2014
Cartas al editor
Association between perceived mental stress and physical activity in elderly Korean people
To the editor: Korea has experienced rapid socio-economic growth over the past several decades and also one of the highest growth rates in the world. The proportion of the elderly population aged over 65 years will increase dramatically from 7.2% in 2000 to 20.8% in 2020. The growth of the elderly population in Korean society threatens its national health.1
Higher levels of stress can lead to a series of negative consequences such as depression and suicide.2 Physically active people are not only less sensitive to negative influences of daily stress, but are also less responsive to physical stress.3 Among stress-coping activities, physical activity (PA) has been shown to be beneficial to both physical and mental health and has been regarded as an effective method to prevent stress-related diseases.4 Thus, helping elderly people who do not have established patterns of PA to acquire healthy habits for increasing PA is useful in terms of public health.
This study used national data from the fifth Korea National Health and Nutrition Survey (KNHANES-V) in 2010 and 2011 to investigate whether the level of PA is associated with perceived mental stress (PMS) status in elderly Korean people. KNHANES-V was conducted using a systematic stratified cluster sampling design. 2 837 elderly people aged over 65 years were selected for this study sample.
Participants were asked to rate their PMS status as very high, high, low, and none. Questions of PA information were compared with the guidelines of the American College of Sports Medicine.5 Information regarding the gender, age, education, family socio-economic status, and marital status of each participant was collected as confounding factors during interviews.
Males show higher levels of education, family socio-economic status, married status, and positive PMS status compared to females. Participation ratios of vigorous, moderate, and low PA significantly declined with age in both males and females (table I). The crude odds ratios (COR) and adjusted odds ratios (AOR) for the high PMS in males and females significantly decreased with meeting guideline of vigorous PA (COR [male= 0.19, female= 0.31], AOR [male= 0.28, female= 0.33], p<.01) and low PA (COR [male= 0.23, female= 0.44], AOR [male= 0.39, female= 0.45], p<.01) compared to subjects who reported no PMS (table II).
To improve PMS, the vigorous and low PA are recommended in elderly Korean people. Therefore, the independent associations between PA levels and PMS status support public health programs that encourage regular PA for elderly Korean people.
We note that when elderly Korean people perceived very much mental stress, they did not perform vigorous and low PA recommendations in the present study. These results indicate that better PMS is associated with higher vigorous and low PA in Korean elders. Highlighting that physically active people report better mental health may be a useful adjunct to encourage people to maintain and increase their levels of PA.6,7 Therefore, from a public health perspective, it is also important to consider environmental factors associated with participation in PA levels in Korean elders.
Kang-Ok Cho, PhD.(1)
(1) Department of Sports Science, Hanyang University. Ansan City, Gyonggi Province, Korea. okcho1@snu.ac.kr
References
1. Korean Statistics Office. Population Statistics. Korea: Korean Statistics Office, 2008. [ Links ]
2. Nielsen L, Curtis T, Kristensen TS, Nielsen NR. What characterizes persons with high levels of perceived stress in Denmark? A national representative study. Scand J Public Health 2008;36(4):369-379. [ Links ]
3. Han MA, Kim KS, Par J, Kang MG, Ryu SY. Association between levels of physical activity and poor self-rated health in Korean adults: The Third Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHAES), 2005. Public Health 2009;123(10):665-669. [ Links ]
4. Kim YS, Park YS, Allegrante JP, Marks R, Ok H, Cho Ko K, Garber CE. Relationship between physical activity and general mental health. Prev Med 2012;55(5):458-468. [ Links ]
5. American College of Sports Medicine. ACSM's guidelines for exercise testing and prescription. 8th ed. Baltimore: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2010. [ Links ]
6. Cho KO. Sleep duration and self-reported health are independently associated with physical activity level in the Korean population. Iranian J Public Health 2014;43(5):801-809. [ Links ]
7. Hamer M, Stamatakis E, Steptoe A. Dose-response relationship between physical activity and mental health: the Scottish Health Survey. Br J Sports Med 2009;43(14):1111-1114. [ Links ]