Journal article
Lower levels of physical activity in childhood associated with adult depression
FN Jacka, JA Pasco, LJ Williams, ER Leslie, S Dodd, GC Nicholson, MA Kotowicz, M Berk
Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport | Published : 2011
Abstract
Emerging evidence indicates that early life exposures influence adult health outcomes and there is cause to hypothesise a role for physical activity (PA) in childhood as a protective factor in adult depression. This study aimed to investigate the association between self-reported levels of PA in childhood and self-reported depressive illness. Lifetime depression and levels of physical activity (low/high) in childhood (<15. yr) were ascertained by self-report in 2152 adults (20-97. yr) participating in an ongoing epidemiological study in south-eastern Australia. Data were collected between 2000 and 2006. In this sample, 141 women (18.9%) and 169 men (12.0%) reported ever having a depressive e..
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Awarded by Eli Lilly and Company
Funding Acknowledgements
Felice Jacka, Julie Pasco, Lana Williams, Seetal Dodd and Michael Berk: have received research support from an unrestricted educational grant from Eli Lilly. Assoc Prof Leslie is supported by an NHMRC Public Health Fellowship #301261. Dr. Jacka was the recipient of post-graduate scholarship funding from Australian Rotary Health and is supported by NHMRC project grant #454356.