According to the researchers, it is difficult to provide a single explanatory factor about the effects of changes in marital status on physical activity.

“It seems that the changes in relationships affect the physical activity of men and women differently,” says postdoctoral researcher Kasper Salin from the University of Jyväskylä, Faculty of Sports and Health Sciences.

The study also investigated the relationship between socioeconomic position and changes in physical activity. Among the men and women with the highest socioeconomic status, the number of aerobic steps increased significantly over the four years. Here, aerobic steps refers to steps taken during activities that last for at least 10 minutes without interruption at a pace of 60 or more steps per minute.

“It is likely that they have added longer lasting and more intense physical activity, such as walking,” Salin says.

Total steps increased during the follow-up period

In the study, 1051 participants had valid pedometer data in 2007 and 2011. At the beginning of the monitoring period, the subjects were between the ages of 34 and 49. The total steps increased slightly during the four-year follow-up period. In 2007, the recommended 10,000 daily steps reached one fifth (19 %) and in 2011 a quarter (25%) of the participants.

“Longer-term monitoring of objectively measured physical activity is rare,” says Salin. “The pedometer used in this study provides a more reliable picture of overall activity than, for example, a traditionally used questionnaire.”

Increasing the number of steps over a four-year follow-up period is a particularly positive thing.

“The monitoring period, however, showed that the rise in the number of steps focused on the highest social classes, especially in aerobic steps,” says Salin. “From the point of view of maintaining physical fitness and working ability, it is important to add aerobic steps.”

Steps accumulate over the course of the day on several occasions if a person gives an opportunity for it.

“Actual exercising is not needed in order to add steps to daily life,” Salin explains. “Instead, attention should be paid to everyday choices. You could walk instead of driving or take stairs instead of an elevator.”

The study is part of the Cardiovascular Risk in Young Finns Study (YFS), initiated in 1980 to determine the cardiovascular risks from childhood to adulthood, led by Professor Olli Raitakari from the University of Turku. This part of the study at the University of Jyväskylä has been funded by the Ministry of Education and Culture and the Finnish Cultural Fund.

For more information:

Postdoctoral Researcher Kasper Salin, kasper.salin@jyu.fi

Professor Mirja Hirvensalo, mirja.hirvensalo@jyu.fi, +358 40 8053944

The original publication:

Salin, K., Hirvensalo, M., Kankaanpää, A., Magnussen, CG, Yang, X., Hutri-Kähönen, N., Viikari, J., Raitakari, O., Telama, R., & Tammelin, T. (2018). Associations of partnering transition and socioeconomic status with a four-year change in daily steps among Finnish adults. Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. DOI: 10.1177 / 1403494818807558}