Abstract
Background While patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) often cite weather conditions as a reason for inactivity, little is known about the relation between physical activity (PA) and weather conditions. The present study investigated the association of day-to-day weather changes on PA in patients with COPD and investigated patient characteristics related to being more or less influenced by weather conditions.
Methods In this longitudinal analysis, device-based day-by-day step counts were objectively measured in COPD patients for up to 12 months. Daily meteorological data (temperature, precipitation, wind speed, hours of sunlight and daylight) were linked to the daily step count and individual and multivariable relations were investigated using mixed model effects. Individual R2 was calculated for every subject to investigate the estimated influence of weather conditions on a patient-level and its relation with patient characteristics.
Results We included 50 patients with a mean follow-up time of 282±93 days, totaling 14 117 patient-days. Daily temperature showed a positive linear pattern up until an inflexion point, after which a negative association with increasing temperature was observed (p<0.0001). Sunshine and daylight time had a positive association with PA (p<0.0001). Precipitation and wind speed were negatively associated with PA (p<0.0001). The median per-patient R2 for overall weather conditions was 0.08, ranging from 0.00 to 0.42. No strong associations between patient characteristics and per-patient R2 were observed.
Conclusion Weather conditions are partly associated with PA in patients with COPD, yet the overall explained variance of PA due to weather conditions is rather low and varied strongly between individuals.
Footnotes
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- Received May 16, 2023.
- Accepted August 4, 2023.
- Copyright ©The authors 2023.
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