Impact of Seasonality on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Strategies
2.2. Selection Criteria
2.3. Assessment of Methodological Quality
2.4. Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Physical Activity Collection Instruments
3.4. Physical Activity and Seasonality
4. Discussion
4.1. Seasonal Variations on Physical Activity
4.2. Tools for Physical Activity Assessment
4.3. Study Designs for Seasonality Assessment
4.4. Limitations and Strengths of the Review
4.5. Implications of the Results for Clinical Research and PA Promotion Interventions
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author (Year) | Country | Climate Data | Objective | Study Design |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adams et al. (2018) [53] | USA (Vermont) | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To examine seasonality impact on PA | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 26 | ||||
Winter (min): −14 | ||||
Akande et al. (2019) [9] | Canada (Nunavut) | ET: Tundra | To measure physical activity levels and explore factors influencing PA | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 7 | ||||
Winter (min): −37 | ||||
Arnardottir et al. (2017) [37] | Iceland | ET/Cfc: Tundra/subpolar oceanic | To examine seasonality impact (hours of daylight) on PA | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 12 | ||||
Winter (min): −7 | ||||
Natural light (h) = 14/7 | ||||
Carr et al. (2016) [16] | USA | - | To explore the variability of physical activity | Randomized controlled trial |
Cepeda et al. (2018) [34] | Netherlands (Rotterdam) | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To examine the seasonality of daily levels of PA | Cross-sectional study |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 22 | ||||
Winter (min): 0 | ||||
Heavy rain during spring and autumn | ||||
Collins et al. (2015) [31] | Canada (Ontario) | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental; | To assess the prevalence, mode, destinations, and duration of active transportation | Cross-sectional study |
Max. Temp (°C): −2.8 in winter, 10.9 in spring, 25.7 summer, and 13.3 in autumn | ||||
Cooke et al. (2016) [54] | Canada (Montreal) | Dfb/Dfc: Warm summer humid continental/subarctic | To evaluate the seasonal variation in daily step counts and sedentary time | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 27 | ||||
Winter (min): −14 | ||||
Dėdelė et al. (2019) [32] | Lithuania (Kaunas) | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental
| To examine associations of seasonal PA levels with socioeconomic and health factors | Cross-sectional study |
Furlanetto et al. (2017) [19] | Belgium (Leuven) and Brazil (Londrina) | Belgium: Cfb, Temperate oceanic | To quantify PA in daily life and compare its variability caused by seasonality | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Brazil: Cfa, Humid Subtropical | ||||
Average summer/winter (1) Belgium, (2) Brazil):
| ||||
Hoaas et al. (2019) [15] | Norway (Tromso), Denmark (Esbjerg) and Australia (Melbourne) | Norway: Dfc, Subarctic | To examine differences in physical activity levels and establishing if any variations in physical activity were attributable to season | Cross-sectional study |
Denmark and Australia: Cfb, temperate oceanic | ||||
Temperature range (°C):
| ||||
Kim et al. (2016) [27] | USA (Southwest central region) | - | To examine the longitudinal trajectories in PA and its correlates | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Kimura et al. (2015) [55] | Japan (Kahoku) | Cfa, humid subtropical | To compare the physical activity between summer and winter seasons | Observational longitudinal prospective study |
Average summer/winter:
| ||||
Klompstra et al. (2019) [45] | Sweden | Dfb/Dfc: Warm-summer humid continental/Subartic Temperature (°C) range:
| To describe the seasonal differences in physical activity | Cross-sectional study |
Kong et al. (2020) [42] | South Korea (Seoul) | Dwa: Monsoon-influenced hot-summer humid continental | To examine how season and temperature levels affect physical activity- | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 30 | ||||
Winter (min): −6 | ||||
Lapointe et al. (2016) [56] | Canada (Quebec) | ET/Dfc/Dfb: Tundra/Warm summer humid continental/Subartic | To evaluate seasonal variation on daily step counts | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 25 | ||||
Winter (min): −15 | ||||
Nakashima et al. (2019) [13] | Japan (Gifu) | Cfa: Humid subtropical (Autumn/Winter/Spring/Summer):
| To clarify the seasonal variation effects on PA | Cross-sectional study |
Nioi et al. (2017) [57] | United Kingdom (Scotland) | Cfb: Temperate oceanic | To examine the variation of ligh exposure between season | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 18 | ||||
Winter (min): −3 | ||||
Rockette-Wagner et al. (2016) [58] | - | - | To examine the effectiveness of a lifestyle intervention | Quasiexperimental pre-post study |
Sayegh et al. (2016) [5] | Qatar | Bwh: Hot deserts | To assess the physical activity levels during 1-year | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 42 | ||||
Winter (min): 13 | ||||
Shoemaker et al. (2016) [23] | USA | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To determine if seasonal variation in temperature affects daily PA | Randomized controlled trial |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 28 | ||||
Winter (min): −11 | ||||
Shoemaker et al. (2019) [24] | USA (West Michigan) | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To determine the presence and magnitude of seasonal variation in daily PA | Retrospective longitudinal study |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 28 | ||||
Winter (min): −11 | ||||
Urbański et al. (2020) [44] | Poland | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To assess the level of leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and its differentiation across the seasons | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 24 | ||||
Winter (min): −7 | ||||
Vaidya et al. (2018) [59] | France | Cfb: Temperate oceanic | To describe the evolution of physical activity parameters among COPD patients | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 27 | ||||
Winter (min): 1 | ||||
Wan et al. (2017) [20] | USA (Boston) | Dfa: Hot summer humid continental | To examine the effect of season on daily PA (among other objectives) | Randomized controlled trial |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 28 | ||||
Winter (min): −8 | ||||
Wesolowska et al. (2018) [17] | Poland | Dfb: Warm summer humid continental | To assess the level of activities of daily living and its differentiation by season | Cross-sectional study |
Average T (°C): | ||||
Summer (max): 24 | ||||
Winter (min): −7 | ||||
Yu et al. (2018) [60] | Netherlands and Switzerland | Cfb: Temperate oceanic | To assess the impact of season on PROs/exacerbations of COPD | Observational longitudinal prospective study (cohort) |
Average T (°C): Netherlands/ Switzerland: | ||||
Summer (max): 22/24 | ||||
Winter (min): 0/−4 |
Author (Year) | Country | Population | Variables (Instrument) | Measurements Periods | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adams et al. (2018) [53] | USA (Vermont) | n = 1476; 70.33% women; university students | Steps per day (smartwatch) | ≥50 days. | Statistically significant variation: fewer steps in winter compared to spring and autumn. |
Akande et al. (2019) [9] | Canada (Nunavut) | n = 272; 43.7% women; healthy adults Inuit and non-Inuit; age (mean ± SD) = 4.9 ± 12.6 years | Steps per day (pedometer) | 1 week during summer months and 1 week during Winter months | Non statistically significant differences |
Arnardottir et al. (2017) [37] | Iceland | n = 138; 61.1% women; older adults; age (mean ± SD) = 80.3 ± 4.9 years | Counts × min−1 (accelerometer) Considering SB, LIPA, LSPA, MVPA. | 1 week during summer months and 1 week during winter months | Statistically significant differences more time during summer in all PA categories, except MVPA. SB was reduced in summer compared to winter |
Carr et al. (2016) [16] | USA | n = 132; Spanish speaking women enrolled in a 12-month physical activity intervention age (mean ± SD) = 41.6 ± 10.1 years |
| Every day for 12 months | Statistically significant differences were observed for both total steps and aerobic steps by season (summer > spring > fall > winter) in both groups |
Cepeda et al. (2018) [34] | Netherlands (Rotterdam) | n = 1166; 56.6% women; three age groups: middle-aged (50–64 years), young-elderly (65–74 years) and old-elderly (≥75 years) |
| 7 days | Middle-aged and young-elderly → Statistically significant more light PA and MVPA in summer than winter No seasonal variations on SB. For old-elderly → non-significant seasonal variations |
Collins et al. (2015) [31] | Canada (Ontario) | n = 1400 (350 per season); 64% women; age (mean) = 51 years | Active transportation (Phone questionnaire) | 7 days before survey. Spring, autumn, summer and winter | Statistically significant lower in winter compared with other 3 seasons. Walking rates were highest in the fall and spring seasons, while cycling rates were highest in spring and summer |
Cooke et al. (2016) [54] | Canada (Montreal) | n = 369; 54% women; adults with overweight/obesity and type II diabetes and/or hypertension; age (mean ± SD) = 59.6 ± 11.2 years |
| 1 week spring/summer vs. autumn/winter | Statistically significant higher number of steps and less sedentary time in spring/summer compared to autumn/winter with objective methods. Non significative variations for subjective methods. |
Dėdelė et al. (2019) [32] | Lithuania (Kaunas) | n = 1111; 57.7% women; age (mean ± SD) = 48.4 ± 16.8 years |
| Once in summer and once in winter | Statistically significant higher PA in summer tan winter. |
Furlanetto et al. (2017) [19] | Belgium (Leuven) and Brazil (Londrina) | n = 37; Belgium (n = 18, 33% women, Brasil (n = 19, 47% women; COPD; age (mean) = 69 y |
| 7 days per season (summer and winter) | Active time: statistically significative decreased in winter compared to summer in both regions. MVPA: non statistically differences. |
Hoaas et al. (2019) [15] | Norway (Tromso), Denmark (Esbjerg) and Australia (Melbourne) | n = 168; 42.8% women; patients with COPD moderate to severe; age (mean)= 66 years (Norway and Australia), 63 y (Denmark) |
| 7 consecutive days (1 cross-sectional observation/person)Seasons: winter, spring, summer or autumn | Non statistically significant differences among seasons. Clinically important difference of 600 steps/day: highest in summer compared with the other seasons |
Kim et al. (2016) [27] | USA (Southwest central region) | n = 669; Women 3 age groups: 20–40 years (n = 83), 41–60 years (n = 394) y >60 years (n = 192) | Steps per day (pedometer) | 18 consecutive months | Statistically significant increase in steps/day in spring. Significant decrease in autumn and winter. No significant change during summer periods. |
Kimura et al. (2015) [55] | Japan (Kahoku) | n = 39; 56% women; Volunteer healthy older adults; Age (mean ± SD) = 70.7 ± 3.2 years | Step per day (pedometer) | 7 days per season (two consecutive seasons for participant) | Statistically significant seasonal differences with higher average steps/day in summer than in winter |
Klompstra et al. (2019) [45] | Sweden | n = 87; 29% women; Outpatients with HF;Age (mean ± SD) = 70 ± 9 years | METs per week (IPAQ-Short Form) | Once in summer and winter time | Non statistically significative differences PA |
Kong et al. (2020) [42] | South Korea (Seoul) | n = 555; 43.7% women; preoperative lung cancer patients; age (mean ± SD) = 61.1 ± 8.9 years |
| 7 consecutive days (1 cross-sectional observation/person) in spring, summer, autumn or winter | Statistically significant seasonal differences on both variables: lower in winter compared to spring |
Lapointe et al. (2016) [56] | Canada (Quebec) | n = 34; 44.1% women; participants with coronary heart disease; age (mean ± SD) = 67 ± 6 years; 2 groups by level of activity: Active (>7500 daily step), or Low active | Steps per day (pedometer) | 1 week in each season: autumn, winter, spring, summer. | Active group: Statistically significant higher number of steps in spring and summer than in autumn and winter Low active: non-significant differences among seasons. |
Nakashima et al. (2019) [13] | Japan (Gifu) | n = 22; 86% women in mountainous agricultural areas; Age (mean ± SD) = 75.1 ± 7.3 years |
| 1 year period with measurements in each season. Accelerometer: 7 day-period in each season | Statistically significant increase in steps/day (spring compared with winter) and in time spent in low intensity activities (higher in spring and summer than in winter). No seasonal variations on the PASE |
Nioi et al. (2017) [57] | United Kingdom (Scotland) | n = 16; 81.2% women living in a care home; Age range = 72–99 years |
| 4 days in 2 seasons: summer and winter | Statistically significant difference with higher PA in summer than in winter |
Rockette-Wagner et al. (2016) [58] | - | n = 150; 91% women; adults with overweight/obesity;age (mean ± SD) = 51.1 ± 10.2 y |
| winter, spring, summer, autumn | Statistically significant differences in number of steps, light PA, MVPA and SB: lower PA and higher SB in winter |
Sayegh et al. (2016) [5] | Qatar | n = 549; adult women; age (mean ± SD) = 37.4 ± 11.7 years |
| One year period | Decrease in steps per day, in June, July, and August |
Shoemaker et al. (2016) [23] | USA | n = 16; 56.2% men with heart failure and DCI/TRC devices; age (median) = 66 y | Daily minutes in activity level over 70 steps/minute (implanted accelerometer) | PA data available for 13–21 months | Statistically significantly higher PA in summer/autumn than in winter |
Shoemaker et al. (2019) [24] | USA (West Michigan) | n = 168; 75% men; with heart failure and DCI/TRC devices; age (mean ± SD) = 63.0 ± 22.8 years | Daily minutes in activity level over 70 steps/minute (implanted accelerometer) | One year period. Bi-monthly data points (start of month and middle of month) | Statistically significative difference between the lowest PA in winter and highest in summer |
Urbański et al. (2020) [44] | Poland | n = 51; 31% women; Participants with SCI; Age (mean ± SD) = 30 ± 7.9 years | Leisure-time physical activity (mild, moderate and heavy) (LTPAQ-SCI) | 4 times/year (spring, summer, autumn and winter) | Statistically significant differences on mild and moderate LTPA (highest in spring, lowest in autumn) and heavy LTPA: (highest in summer, lowest in autumn) |
Vaidya et al. (2018) [59] | France | n = 51; Patients with Age (mean ± SD) = 63 ± 9 years | Steps/day (actimeter) | 1 week at the beginning and 1 week at the end of PRP | Statistically significant variation with higher amount of steps/day in summer compared to spring |
Wan et al. (2017) [20] | USA (Boston) | n = 109; 98.5% men; U.S. Veterans with COPD in a RCT; Age (mean ± SD) = 68.6 ± 8.3 years | Steps/day (pedometer) | 13 weeks. Seasons: spring, summer, autumn, winter. | Statistically significant decrease during the transition from summer to autumn, and significant increase in the transition from spring to summer. |
Wesolowska et al. (2018) [17] | Poland | n = 106 volunteers; 59.4% women; three age groups: young (22–26 y), middle-aged (27–59 y), and senior (60–86 y) |
| Pedometer: 7 consecutive days per season IPAQ-LF: once per season | Statistically significant differences on steps/day: highest in summer and spring season in all study groups |
Yu et al. (2018) [60] | Netherlands and Switzerland | n = 409; Patients with COPD |
| Follow-up: 5 years Seasons: winter, spring, summer, autumn | Statistically significantly differences: higher level of PA in summer than winter |
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Garriga, A.; Sempere-Rubio, N.; Molina-Prados, M.J.; Faubel, R. Impact of Seasonality on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010002
Garriga A, Sempere-Rubio N, Molina-Prados MJ, Faubel R. Impact of Seasonality on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarriga, Antonio, Nuria Sempere-Rubio, María José Molina-Prados, and Raquel Faubel. 2022. "Impact of Seasonality on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010002
APA StyleGarriga, A., Sempere-Rubio, N., Molina-Prados, M. J., & Faubel, R. (2022). Impact of Seasonality on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010002