The longitudinal relation between purpose in life and accelerometer-measured physical activity
Sutin, Angelina R.; Luchetti, Martina; Kekäläinen, Tiia; Stephan, Yannick; Terracciano, Antonio (2026)
Huom! Embargollinen tiedosto,
avautuu julkiseksi: 01.04.2028
avautuu julkiseksi: 01.04.2028
Sutin, Angelina R.
Luchetti, Martina
Kekäläinen, Tiia
Stephan, Yannick
Terracciano, Antonio
Elsevier
2026
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2026040926270
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2026040926270
Tiivistelmä
Abstract
Background and aims
Purpose in life is associated consistently with accelerometer-measured physical activity assessed concurrently. This research addresses the longitudinal relation between purpose and accelerometry-measured physical activity among older adults.
Methods
Participants from the National Health and Aging Trends Study (N = 747; Meanage = 79.20) reported on their purpose and wore an accelerometer at four annual assessments. Physical activity was quantified with four metrics: total activity counts, number of active bouts, activity fragmentation, and sedentary fragmentation.
Results
Consistent with cross-sectional associations, purpose at baseline was associated prospectively with the four metrics measured one and two years later (median β = .08) but attenuated for two of the metrics at year three. Baseline purpose was associated with the intercept of physical activity but not change across the assessments. Within-person, participants were more physically active at assessments when their purpose was higher than their average.
Conclusions
Purpose in life is a short-term prospective and within-person predictor of physical activity but is unrelated to the rate of change in accelerometer-measured physical activity over three years in older adulthood.
Background and aims
Purpose in life is associated consistently with accelerometer-measured physical activity assessed concurrently. This research addresses the longitudinal relation between purpose and accelerometry-measured physical activity among older adults.
Methods
Participants from the National Health and Aging Trends Study (N = 747; Meanage = 79.20) reported on their purpose and wore an accelerometer at four annual assessments. Physical activity was quantified with four metrics: total activity counts, number of active bouts, activity fragmentation, and sedentary fragmentation.
Results
Consistent with cross-sectional associations, purpose at baseline was associated prospectively with the four metrics measured one and two years later (median β = .08) but attenuated for two of the metrics at year three. Baseline purpose was associated with the intercept of physical activity but not change across the assessments. Within-person, participants were more physically active at assessments when their purpose was higher than their average.
Conclusions
Purpose in life is a short-term prospective and within-person predictor of physical activity but is unrelated to the rate of change in accelerometer-measured physical activity over three years in older adulthood.