| Literature DB >> 26377803 |
Ashley R Cooper1,2, Anna Goodman3, Angie S Page4, Lauren B Sherar5, Dale W Esliger6, Esther M F van Sluijs7, Lars Bo Andersen8, Sigmund Anderssen9, Greet Cardon10, Rachel Davey11, Karsten Froberg12, Pedro Hallal13, Kathleen F Janz14, Katarzyna Kordas15, Susi Kreimler16, Russ R Pate17, Jardena J Puder18, John J Reilly19, Jo Salmon20, Luis B Sardinha21, Anna Timperio22, Ulf Ekelund23.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physical activity and sedentary behaviour in youth have been reported to vary by sex, age, weight status and country. However, supporting data are often self-reported and/or do not encompass a wide range of ages or geographical locations. This study aimed to describe objectively-measured physical activity and sedentary time patterns in youth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26377803 PMCID: PMC4574095 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-015-0274-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Descriptive characteristics of study participants
| N (%) participants | N (%) measured time points | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full sample | 27,637 (100 %) | 35,360 (100 %) | |
| Sex | Male | 11,199 (41 %) | 14,633 (41 %) |
| Female | 16,438 (59 %) | 20,727 (59 %) | |
| Age† | 2–4 years | 1044 (4 %) | 1044 (3 %) |
| 5–6 years | 2379 (9 %) | 2379 (7 %) | |
| 7–8 years | 1168 (4 %) | 1654 (5 %) | |
| 9–10 years | 6054 (22 %) | 6910 (20 %) | |
| 11–12 years | 9981 (36 %) | 11,186 (32 %) | |
| 13–14 years | 4706 (17 %) | 9196 (26 %) | |
| 15–16 years | 1747 (6 %) | 2342 (7 %) | |
| 17–18 years | 558 (2 %) | 649 (2 %) | |
| Weight | Normal | 20,387 (74 %) | 26,222 (75 %) |
| Overweight | 4939 (18 %) | 6238 (18 %) | |
| Obese | 2048 (7 %) | 2450 (7 %) | |
| Country | Australia [ | 2395 (9 %) | 3531 (10 %) |
| Belgium [ | 257 (1 %) | 257 (1 %) | |
| Brazil [ | 420 (2 %) | 420 (1 %) | |
| Denmark [ | 1905 (7 %) | 2563 (7 %) | |
| Estonia [ | 643 (2 %) | 643 (2 %) | |
| Norway [ | 364 (1 %) | 364 (1 %) | |
| Portugal [ | 1070 (4 %) | 1174 (3 %) | |
| Switzerland [ | 742 (3 %) | 742 (2 %) | |
| UK [ | 10,301 (37 %) | 14,424 (41 %) | |
| USA [N = 4] | 9540 (35 %) | 11,242 (32 %) |
UK = United Kingdom, USA = Unites States of America
† For individuals measured more than once, the participant characteristics give age and weight status at baseline while the time point characteristics give age and weight status during the measurement period in question
‡Numbers add up to less than the total for weight status because of missing data on 1 % of participants
Fig. 1Physical activity level by age and sex, according to different activity metrics. a Total physical activity (accelerometer counts per minute); b Percentage time in Moderate to Vigorous Physical activity (MVPA); c Percentage time in light intensity physical activity; d Percentage time sedentary. CI = confidence interval, cpm = counts per minute. In all graphs, boys aged 5–6 are the reference population. All graphs present mean differences in physical activity variables, adjusting for study population and season.
Fig. 2Association between weight status and physical activity. a Total physical activity (accelerometer counts per minute) by age, sex and weight status; b Dose response relationship between total physical activity and BMI by sex CI = confidence interval, owt = overweight, cpm = counts per minute
Fig. 3Average activity counts per minute across selected countries. a Level of physical activity across selected countries at age 9–10. b Level of physical activity across selected countries at age 12–13. CI = confidence interval. The Australian sample pools the two ICAD studies collected in Melbourne; both produced similar findings when analysed separately
Fig. 4Achievement of physical activity guidelines across selected countries. a Average percentage of participants achieving ≥60 min of MVPA each measurement day. b Average percentage of days on which ≥60 min of MVPA were recorded
Fig. 5Comparison between selected countries of the relative effect of sex, age and weight status. a Difference in physical activity by sex in selected countries at ages 9–10 and 12–13. b Longitudinal change in physical activity per year of increasing age. c Difference in physical activity associated with higher BMI in selected countries at ages 9–10 and 12–13. SD = standard deviation. Forest plots display random-effects meta-analysis. The estimates for each country were calculated from regression models adjusted for age, sex and season, fitted to each country in turn