4.6 Article

Annual rhythms in adults' lifestyle and health (ARIA): protocol for a 12-month longitudinal study examining temporal patterns in weight, activity, diet, and wellbeing in Australian adults

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-10054-3

Keywords

Physical activity; Sedentary behaviour; Sleep; Diet; Weight; Overweight; Obesity; Epidemiology; Compositional data

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1163338]
  2. Career Development Fellowship from the National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1125913]
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council Early Career Fellowship [APP1162166]
  4. Heart Foundation PostGraduate Fellowship [APP102084]

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This study aims to track the annual rhythm in body weight, activity patterns, dietary patterns, and wellbeing in Australian adults to analyze the influence of temporal factors such as season and festivals on weight gain. Additionally, the study will investigate the associations between changes in children's and parents' weight, activity, and diet to identify critical opportunities for intervention in obesity prevention.
BackgroundAlmost one in three Australian adults are now obese, and the rate continues to rise. The causes of obesity are multifaceted and include environmental, cultural and lifestyle factors. Emerging evidence suggests there may be temporal patterns in weight gain related, for example, to season and major festivals such as Christmas, potentially due to changes in diet, daily activity patterns or both. The aim of this study is to track the annual rhythm in body weight, 24h activity patterns, dietary patterns, and wellbeing in a cohort of Australian adults. In addition, through data linkage with a concurrent children's cohort study, we aim to examine whether changes in children's body mass index, activity and diet are related to those of their parents.MethodsA community-based sample of 375 parents aged 18 to 65years old, residing in or near Adelaide, Australia, and who have access to a Bluetooth-enabled mobile device or a computer and home internet, will be recruited. Across a full year, daily activities (minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity, light physical activity, sedentary behaviour and sleep) will be measured using wrist-worn accelerometry (Fitbit Charge 3). Body weight will be measured daily using Fitbit wifi scales. Self-reported dietary intake (Dietary Questionnaire for Epidemiological Studies V3.2), and psychological wellbeing (WHOQOL-BREF and DASS-21) will be assessed eight times throughout the 12-month period. Annual patterns in weight will be examined using Lowess curves. Associations between changes in weight and changes in activity and diet compositions will be examined using repeated measures multi-level models. The associations between parent's and children's weight, activity and diet will be investigated using multi-level models.DiscussionTemporal factors, such as day type (weekday or weekend day), cultural celebrations and season, may play a key role in weight gain. The aim is to identify critical opportunities for intervention to assist the prevention of weight gain. Family-based interventions may be an important intervention strategy.Trial registrationAustralia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, identifier ACTRN12619001430123. Prospectively registered on 16 October 2019.

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