Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2026 May 8. doi: 10.1186/s12966-026-01922-z. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: The "physical activity health paradox" posits that physical activity done during work (occupational physical activity [OPA]) may not yield the health benefits consistently observed for leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and, in some cases, may be harmful. Given the broad implications for such a paradox, which contradicts current public health guidelines for physical activity, we conducted a narrative, non-systematic review to discuss the current epidemiological and mechanistic evidence on the topic to inform opportunities for research and practice moving forward.
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL EVIDENCE: Epidemiological evidence shows that LTPA is reliably protective against mortality and cardiovascular disease, whereas OPA has mixed or adverse associations. Several recent meta-analyses found higher all-cause mortality risk among men with high vs low OPA and found LTPA to potentially mitigate this OPA risk. Studies with device-measured OPA further highlight potential heterogeneity by OPA task and context. These conclusions remain limited by low quality evidence due to heterogeneous OPA exposure measurements, referent group selection, challenges in study design, and varied confounder adjustments.
MECHANISTIC EVIDENCE: Mechanistically, four interrelated pathways that may explain the observed presence of a paradox have been proposed and preliminarily tested: (1) acute cardiovascular strain catalyzed by long-duration OPA with little recovery; (2) downstream vascular changes such as greater arterial stiffness, blunted baroreflex sensitivity, and maladaptive cardiac remodeling from chronic OPA exposure; (3) systemic inflammation associated with high OPA levels; and (4) modifiers such as low cardiorespiratory fitness and high psychosocial stress amplifying strain, inflammation, and risk. Current evidence is limited by reliance on cross-sectional or between-subject designs, crude OPA classification, and limited mechanistic interventions.
CONCLUSIONS: Unlike the clear benefits from LTPA, research findings examining the health effects of OPA remain mixed. While uncertainty remains, the balance of evidence suggests that OPA is less beneficial to health than LTPA which should be considered in public health messaging. Advancing the field will require multidimensional OPA exposure assessment, rigorous study designs, and evaluation of mechanism-driven outcomes to clarify causal pathways and identify feasible intervention targets to promote health in workers with physically demanding jobs.
PMID:42104355 | DOI:10.1186/s12966-026-01922-z

