Watching TV May Increase Diabetes Risk
ByPeople who watch an excessive amount of televion have a higher risk of developing diabetes, according to a recent study.
Researchers found that each hour spent watching television daily increases the risk of developing the metabolic disease by 3.4 percent.
For the study, researchers collected and analyzed data from participants in the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) study (published in 2002 and funded by the National Institute of Digestive and Diabetes and Kidney Diseases [NIDDK] section of the US National Institutes of Health [NIH]). That study enrolled more than 3,000 overweight adults in the United States who were at least 25 years of age with the goal of delaying or preventing type 2 diabetes in high risk individuals with either a metformin drug or lifestyle intervention.
Previous work has already suggested that the lifestyle intervention was successful at reducing the incidence of diabetes and achieving its goals of 7% weight loss and 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity activity (such as brisk walking).
Prior to the intervention, total time spent watching TV was not found to be significantly different between the placebo, metformin, and lifestyle groups (around 140 minutes per day in all three groups). The daily total of time spent sitting at work plus TV time was also not significantly different across groups (between 410 and 423 minutes per day) when the study began.
For the lifestyle participants, a reduction in reported TV watching time throughout follow-up was observed for all participant subgroups including age, sex, work status, race/ethnicity, obesity status, or those achieving the weight and/or activity goal(s). Similarly, the lifestyle group had the greatest reduction in mean time spent in TV watching time plus time sitting at work during follow-up. The combined average reduction in TV watching and time sitting at work was 9, 6, and 37 min/day for the placebo, metformin and lifestyle groups respectively.
The authors then investigated the impact of sedentary behavior over time on diabetes incidence. For participants in all treatment arms, the risk of developing diabetes increased approximately 3.4 percent for each hour spent watching TV after adjustment for age, sex, treatment arm and time-dependent leisure physical activity. This association was reduced when time-dependent weight was added to the model (to a 2.1% increased risk of developing diabetes per hour of watching TV, which was not statistically significant) suggesting that subsequent changes in body weight may account for some of the relationship between sitting behavior changes and diabetes development.
"These findings are particularly noteworthy because a decrease in sitting occurred despite the absence of program goals aimed at reducing sitting," Kriska said. "It is likely that a lifestyle intervention program that incorporates a specific goal of decreasing sitting time would result in greater changes in sitting and likely more health improvements than are demonstrated here. "
The findings are detailed in the journal Diabetologia.