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Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK

This cross-sectional study assessed the association between depression and PA in university students of both genders and the role of body image perception as a potential effect modifier. Undergraduate students (N = 3706) from seven universities in the UK completed a self-administered questionnaire t...

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Autores principales: El Ansari, Walid, Stock, Christiane, Phillips, Ceri, Mabhala, Andi, Stoate, Mary, Adetunji, Hamed, Deeny, Pat, John, Jill, Davies, Shan, Parke, Sian, Hu, Xiaoling, Snelgrove, Sherrill
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3084462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21556187
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020281
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author El Ansari, Walid
Stock, Christiane
Phillips, Ceri
Mabhala, Andi
Stoate, Mary
Adetunji, Hamed
Deeny, Pat
John, Jill
Davies, Shan
Parke, Sian
Hu, Xiaoling
Snelgrove, Sherrill
author_facet El Ansari, Walid
Stock, Christiane
Phillips, Ceri
Mabhala, Andi
Stoate, Mary
Adetunji, Hamed
Deeny, Pat
John, Jill
Davies, Shan
Parke, Sian
Hu, Xiaoling
Snelgrove, Sherrill
author_sort El Ansari, Walid
collection PubMed
description This cross-sectional study assessed the association between depression and PA in university students of both genders and the role of body image perception as a potential effect modifier. Undergraduate students (N = 3706) from seven universities in the UK completed a self-administered questionnaire that assessed sociodemographic information; a range of health, health behaviour and health awareness related factors; the modified version of Beck’s Depression Inventory (M-BDI); educational achievement, and different levels of physical activity (PA), such as moderate PA (at least 5 days per week moderate exercise of at least 30 minutes), and vigorous PA (at least 3 days per week vigorous exercise of at least 20 minutes). Only 12.4% of the sample achieved the international recommended level for moderate PA, and 33.1% achieved the recommendations for vigorous PA. Both moderate and vigorous PA were inversely related to the M-BDI score. Physically active students, regardless of the type of PA, were significantly more likely to perceive their health as good, to have higher health awareness, to perform strengthening exercises, and to be males. The stratified analyses indicated that the association between depression and PA differed by body image. In students perceiving their body image as ‘just right’, moderate (>4th percentile) and high (>5th percentile) M-BDI scores were inversely related to vigorous PA. However, in students who perceived their body image as ‘overweight’, the inverse association was only significant in those with high M-BDI scores. We conclude that the positive effect of PA on depression could be down modulated by the negative impact of a ‘distorted’ body image on depression. The practical implications of these findings are that PA programmes targeting persons with depressive symptoms should include effective components to enhance body image perception.
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spelling pubmed-30844622011-05-09 Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK El Ansari, Walid Stock, Christiane Phillips, Ceri Mabhala, Andi Stoate, Mary Adetunji, Hamed Deeny, Pat John, Jill Davies, Shan Parke, Sian Hu, Xiaoling Snelgrove, Sherrill Int J Environ Res Public Health Article This cross-sectional study assessed the association between depression and PA in university students of both genders and the role of body image perception as a potential effect modifier. Undergraduate students (N = 3706) from seven universities in the UK completed a self-administered questionnaire that assessed sociodemographic information; a range of health, health behaviour and health awareness related factors; the modified version of Beck’s Depression Inventory (M-BDI); educational achievement, and different levels of physical activity (PA), such as moderate PA (at least 5 days per week moderate exercise of at least 30 minutes), and vigorous PA (at least 3 days per week vigorous exercise of at least 20 minutes). Only 12.4% of the sample achieved the international recommended level for moderate PA, and 33.1% achieved the recommendations for vigorous PA. Both moderate and vigorous PA were inversely related to the M-BDI score. Physically active students, regardless of the type of PA, were significantly more likely to perceive their health as good, to have higher health awareness, to perform strengthening exercises, and to be males. The stratified analyses indicated that the association between depression and PA differed by body image. In students perceiving their body image as ‘just right’, moderate (>4th percentile) and high (>5th percentile) M-BDI scores were inversely related to vigorous PA. However, in students who perceived their body image as ‘overweight’, the inverse association was only significant in those with high M-BDI scores. We conclude that the positive effect of PA on depression could be down modulated by the negative impact of a ‘distorted’ body image on depression. The practical implications of these findings are that PA programmes targeting persons with depressive symptoms should include effective components to enhance body image perception. Molecular Diversity Preservation International (MDPI) 2011-02 2011-01-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3084462/ /pubmed/21556187 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020281 Text en © 2011 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Article
El Ansari, Walid
Stock, Christiane
Phillips, Ceri
Mabhala, Andi
Stoate, Mary
Adetunji, Hamed
Deeny, Pat
John, Jill
Davies, Shan
Parke, Sian
Hu, Xiaoling
Snelgrove, Sherrill
Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title_full Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title_fullStr Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title_full_unstemmed Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title_short Does the Association between Depressive Symptomatology and Physical Activity Depend on Body Image Perception? A Survey of Students from Seven Universities in the UK
title_sort does the association between depressive symptomatology and physical activity depend on body image perception? a survey of students from seven universities in the uk
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3084462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21556187
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph8020281
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