I. Weller et P. Corey, THE IMPACT OF EXCLUDING NONLEISURE ENERGY-EXPENDITURE ON THE RELATIONBETWEEN PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY AND MORTALITY IN WOMEN, Epidemiology, 9(6), 1998, pp. 632-635
The purpose of this study was to examine the relation between physical
activity and mortality in a 7-year follow-up of a sample of women mor
e than 30 years of age (N = 6,620) from the Canada Fitness Survey coho
rt, which was initiated in 1981. Age-adjusted relative risks relating
quartiles of average daily energy expenditure (kilocalories per kilogr
am of body weight per day) to mortality were estimated using logistic
regression. Compared with the least active, the risk of all-cause mort
ality was 0.73 for those in the highest quartile (P for trend = 0.03).
The associations were stronger for cardiovascular disease mortality (
odds ratio = 0.51; P for trend = 0.01) and fatal myocardial infarction
(odds ratio = 0.61; P for trend = 0.04) for those in the highest quar
tile. These relations were due mainly to the contribution of non-leisu
re (household chores) energy expenditure, which represented, on averag
e, 82% of women's total activity. The accompanying study on the same c
ohort by Villeneuve et al reported estimates based on a subset of leis
ure-time physical activity only, which underestimates the activity of
many women (Villeneuve PJ, Morrison HI, Craig CL, Schaubel DE. Physica
l activity, physical fitness, and risk of dying. Epidemiology 1998;9;6
32-635). The resulting bias illustrates the importance of including no
n-leisure energy expenditure in the assessment of total activity. Thes
e data support the hypothesis that physical activity is inversely asso
ciated with risk of death in women.