Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults

BackgroundPhysical activity (PA) has a significant health impact worldwide and has been linked to a lower risk of the common cold.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to estimate the form of PA among Chinese adults and the correlation between PA and number of the common cold in China's eastern, c...

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Main Authors: Renjie Tu, Yifan Lu, Kuan Tao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.864515/full
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author Renjie Tu
Yifan Lu
Kuan Tao
author_facet Renjie Tu
Yifan Lu
Kuan Tao
author_sort Renjie Tu
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundPhysical activity (PA) has a significant health impact worldwide and has been linked to a lower risk of the common cold.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to estimate the form of PA among Chinese adults and the correlation between PA and number of the common cold in China's eastern, central, and western areas.DesignA cross-sectional study.SettingChina's eastern, central, and western regions from 30 November 2020 to 30 March 2021.PatientsA total of 1,920 healthy participants, who aged over 18 years old, with Internet access, were enrolled, and then self-reported PA behaviors and number of the common cold were collected.MeasurementsThe authors calculated preference, intensity, frequency, and duration of PA in Chinese based on gender, age, and broad occupational categories and explored the potential effect between these factors and the common cold.ResultsApproximately 20.4% of participants reported not participating in sports regularly. Except for gender, there were significant differences in PA preference and intensity among the remaining individuals (P <0.05). Sixteen common exercises were divided into three intensity levels by the Borg CR10 Scale: low- (5), moderate- (8), and high-intensity exercises (3), and the corresponding intensity, frequency, and duration were computed with significant differences (P <0.05). The most popular workouts are “Brisk walking” and “Running.” Age, sex, and occupation had no significant effect on colds (P > 0.05). However, intensity shows a U-shaped dose-response relationship with colds, whereas the frequency and duration have an inverse dose-response relationship (P <0.05). High intensity combined with high frequency increased colds the most. Nevertheless, non-exercise groups always have the most colds in each comparison.LimitationsThe result may be vulnerable to recall bias.ConclusionIntensity showed that U-shape, frequency, and duration showed inverse response to the number of colds last year, but age, sex, and occupation had no significant effects. High intensity and high frequency mixed increased colds the most, regardless of duration.
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spelling doaj.art-ef3339e897864a64b15b3198a25d0fc32022-12-22T02:11:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782022-05-011310.3389/fpsyg.2022.864515864515Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese AdultsRenjie Tu0Yifan Lu1Kuan Tao2School of Sport Medicine and Physical Therapy, Beijing Sport University, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Sport Medicine and Physical Therapy, Beijing Sport University, Beijing, ChinaSchool of Sports Engineering, Beijing Sport University, Beijing, ChinaBackgroundPhysical activity (PA) has a significant health impact worldwide and has been linked to a lower risk of the common cold.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to estimate the form of PA among Chinese adults and the correlation between PA and number of the common cold in China's eastern, central, and western areas.DesignA cross-sectional study.SettingChina's eastern, central, and western regions from 30 November 2020 to 30 March 2021.PatientsA total of 1,920 healthy participants, who aged over 18 years old, with Internet access, were enrolled, and then self-reported PA behaviors and number of the common cold were collected.MeasurementsThe authors calculated preference, intensity, frequency, and duration of PA in Chinese based on gender, age, and broad occupational categories and explored the potential effect between these factors and the common cold.ResultsApproximately 20.4% of participants reported not participating in sports regularly. Except for gender, there were significant differences in PA preference and intensity among the remaining individuals (P <0.05). Sixteen common exercises were divided into three intensity levels by the Borg CR10 Scale: low- (5), moderate- (8), and high-intensity exercises (3), and the corresponding intensity, frequency, and duration were computed with significant differences (P <0.05). The most popular workouts are “Brisk walking” and “Running.” Age, sex, and occupation had no significant effect on colds (P > 0.05). However, intensity shows a U-shaped dose-response relationship with colds, whereas the frequency and duration have an inverse dose-response relationship (P <0.05). High intensity combined with high frequency increased colds the most. Nevertheless, non-exercise groups always have the most colds in each comparison.LimitationsThe result may be vulnerable to recall bias.ConclusionIntensity showed that U-shape, frequency, and duration showed inverse response to the number of colds last year, but age, sex, and occupation had no significant effects. High intensity and high frequency mixed increased colds the most, regardless of duration.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.864515/fullChineserisk factor (RF)coldsexercise intensityphysical activity
spellingShingle Renjie Tu
Yifan Lu
Kuan Tao
Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
Frontiers in Psychology
Chinese
risk factor (RF)
colds
exercise intensity
physical activity
title Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
title_full Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
title_fullStr Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
title_full_unstemmed Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
title_short Regular Physical Activities Inhibit Risk Factors of the Common Cold Among Chinese Adults
title_sort regular physical activities inhibit risk factors of the common cold among chinese adults
topic Chinese
risk factor (RF)
colds
exercise intensity
physical activity
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.864515/full
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