Figures
There are errors in Figs 1–5. There are also errors in Table 3 and Table 4. The corrected figures and tables are based on the NCEP Adult Treatment Panel III (ATPIII panel). Please see the correct Figs 1–5 and the correct Table 3 and Table 4 below.
ORs are adjusted for gender, age, education level (university degree vs. not), energy intake (kcal·d-1 in quartiles), smoking habits (regular smoker vs. not) and psycho-social stress (self-reported into four levels), estimated VO2max (ml·min-1·kg-1, in tertiles) and % of wear time spent in MVPA (in tertiles). * Denotes significant difference to reference group.
ORs are adjusted for gender, age, education level (university degree vs. not), energy intake (kcal·d-1 in quartiles), smoking habits (regular smoker vs. not) and psycho-social stress (self-reported into four levels), % of wear time spent in MVPA (in tertiles), and estimated VO2max (ml·min-1·kg-1, in tertiles). * Denotes significant difference to reference group.
ORs are adjusted for gender, age, education level (university degree vs. not), energy intake (kcal·d-1 in quartiles), smoking habits (regular smoker vs. not) and psycho-social stress (self-reported into four levels), % of wear time spent in SED (in tertiles), and estimated VO2max (ml·min-1·kg-1, in tertiles). * Denotes significant difference to reference group.
ORs are adjusted for gender, age, education level (university degree vs. not), energy intake (kcal·d-1 in quartiles), smoking habits (regular smoker vs. not) and psycho-social stress (self-reported into four levels), % of wear time spent in SED (in tertiles), and % of wear time spent in MVPA (in tertiles). * Denotes significant difference to reference group.
ORs are adjusted for gender, age (yrs.), education level (university degree vs. not), energy intake (kcal·d-1, in quartiles), smoking habits (regular vs. not), psychosocial stress (self-reported into four levels) and fitness (in tertiles).
Reference
- 1. Ekblom Ö, Ekblom-Bak E, Rosengren A, Hallsten M, Bergström G, Börjesson M (2015) Cardiorespiratory Fitness, Sedentary Behaviour and Physical Activity Are Independently Associated with the Metabolic Syndrome, Results from the SCAPIS Pilot Study. PLoS ONE 10(6): e0131586. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0131586 pmid:26120842
Citation: Ekblom Ö, Ekblom-Bak E, Rosengren A, Hallsten M, Bergström G, Börjesson M (2018) Correction: Cardiorespiratory Fitness, Sedentary Behaviour and Physical Activity Are Independently Associated with the Metabolic Syndrome, Results from the SCAPIS Pilot Study. PLoS ONE 13(5): e0197801. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0197801
Published: May 22, 2018
Copyright: © 2018 Ekblom et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.