| Literature DB >> 29219092 |
Veronica J Poitras1, Casey E Gray2, Xanne Janssen3, Salome Aubert2, Valerie Carson4, Guy Faulkner5, Gary S Goldfield2, John J Reilly3, Margaret Sampson2,6, Mark S Tremblay2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this systematic review was to examine the relationships between sedentary behaviour (SB) and health indicators in children aged 0 to 4 years, and to determine what doses of SB (i.e., duration, patterns [frequency, interruptions], and type) were associated with health indicators.Entities:
Keywords: Adiposity; Bone and skeletal health; Cardiometabolic health; Cognitive development; Early years; Fitness; Infants; Motor development; Preschoolers; Reading; Risks; Screen time; Sedentary behaviour; Sitting; Toddlers
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29219092 PMCID: PMC5773886 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4849-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram for the identification, screening, eligibility, and inclusion of studies. *Note that the numbers for each health indicator do not sum to the total number of included studies because more than one health indicator was reported in some studies
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and adiposity
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | ||||
| The range of mean ages at time of exposure measurement was ~0.75 to 4.95 years; the oldest mean age at follow-up was 15.5 years. Data were collected by randomized trial, case-control, cross-sectionally, and up to 12 years of follow-up. Adiposity measures were: BMI (absolute, z-score, SD score, percentile); fat mass index, lean mass index, trunk fat mass index; % body fat (measured using DXA); skinfold ratio (triceps skinfold thickness to subscapular skinfold thickness); sum of skinfolds; waist-to-height ratio; waist-to-hip ratio; weight-for-height (z-score); weight-for-age (z-score); waist circumference (absolute, z-score for age); weight status (CDC, IOTF, or WHO cut-points; Flemish reference data; French reference standards; Rolland Cachera reference curves; United Kingdom reference standards in 1999); total fat mass (SD score); lean mass (SD score). | ||||||||
| 412 (1) | Randomized triala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Moderatee |
| 32,699 (13) | Longitudinalf | Serious risk of biasg | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowh |
| 1242 (2) | Case-controli | Serious risk of biasj | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowk |
| 94,191 (47) | Cross-sectionall | Serious risk of biasm | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lown |
BMI Body Mass Index, CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, DXA dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, IOTF International Obesity Task Force, SD standard deviation, WHO World Health Organization
aIncludes 1 randomized controlled trial [34]
bSerious risk of bias. Unclear if allocation was adequately concealed prior to group assignment; group allocation was adequately concealed from control, but not intervention group during the study; unclear if height and weight were directly measured or proxy-reported; baseline data were not reported, making it impossible to determine if baseline imbalances existed between groups [34]
cScreen time was significantly lower in the intervention vs control group at 2 mo, 6 mo, and 9 mo follow-up post-intervention (mean ± SD: 2 mo: 39.48 ± 16.36 vs 86.64 ± 21.63 min/day; 6 mo: 24.72 ± 4.45 vs 84.95 ± 14.77 min/day; 9 mo: 21.15 ± 6.12 vs 93.96 ± 18.84 min/day; all p < 0.001)
dIntervention: 3 printed materials and interactive CDs and one counselling call intended to decrease screen time; 8-week duration. Control: Usual care; unaware of counselling interventions
eThe quality of evidence from the randomized trial was downgraded from “high” to “moderate” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
fIncludes 13 longitudinal studies [33, 45, 54, 81–90] from 9 unique samples. Pagani et al. [90] and Fitzpatrick et al. [89] reported data from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development; Reilly et al. [81] and Leary et al. [82] reported data from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC); Gooze et al. [84] and Flores and Lin [83] reported data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (ECLS-B); and Fuller-Tyszkiewicz et al. [54] and Wheaton et al. [85] reported data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). Results are presented separately and participants are counted only once
gSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of the exposure measure [33, 45, 54, 81–90]. Data were reported as missing, but amount and reasons were not provided [89]. Height and weight data were incomplete without explanation for 23% of the analyzed sample and 60.7% of the original cohort [81]. Possible selective reporting: differences between included and excluded participants were reported for confounding variables but not exposure variables without explanation [82]. BMI at age 3 yr was analyzed, but was not reported in the purpose or methods [88]. Did not account for potentially important confounding variables or mediating factors: sugar-sweetened beverage consumption and sleep were assessed but not accounted for [33]; diet was not measured or included in the analysis [45]; adjusted for physical activity [89]; of the potential child and family confounders that were assessed, potential confounders were included or omitted from analyses based on the authors’ determination of what was “likely to be linked to our predictor or outcome variables,” without providing a basis for that determination [89]. Data were pooled from the control and experimental groups of a messaging-based obesity prevention intervention study [33]
hThe quality of evidence from the longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
iIncludes 2 case-control studies [35, 36]
jSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of the 1-day physical activity recall questionnaire [36]. Potentially inappropriate statistical analysis: investigators dichotomized participants by category of TV viewing of ≥1 h/day or <1 h/day based on exploratory bivariate analyses that showed 1 h to be the duration most related to children’s weight status [35]
kThe quality of evidence from the case-control studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
lIncludes 47 cross-sectional studies [31–33, 37–80] from 40 unique samples. Williams et al. [37], Byun et al. [39], and Byun et al. [38] reported data from the Children’s Activity and Movement in Preschool Study (CHAMPS); Sijtsma et al. [45] and Sijtsma et al. [46] reported data from the Groningen Expert Center for Kids with Obesity (GECKO) Drenthe birth cohort; Manios et al. [48], Kourlaba et al. [49], and van Stralen et al. [50] reported data from the Growth, Exercise and Nutrition Epidemiological Study in preSchoolers (GENESIS); Mendoza et al. [71] reported data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999 to 2002, Fulton et al. [72] from NHANES 1999 to 2006, and Twarog et al. [73] from NHANES 2008 to 2012; Taverno Ross et al. [76] and Espana-Romero et al. [77] reported data from the Study of Health and Activity in Preschool Environments (SHAPES); Brown et al. [55] and Fuller-Tyszkiewicz et al. [54] reported data from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC); Dolinsky et al. [53] and Boling Turer et al. [45] reported data from Kids and Adults Now: Defeat Obesity! (KAN-DO). Results are presented separately and participants are counted only once
mSerious risk of bias. Potentially inappropriate sampling technique: participants were a non-representative convenience sample [66]; sampling deviated from protocol and specific deviations were not documented [57]. Potentially inappropriate measurement tools were used: questionable validity and reliability of the exposure measure [31–33, 41, 43–46, 49–51, 54–62, 64–76] and outcome measure [65]; questionable validity of exposure measure [42, 52, 63, 79]; poor reliability of exposure measure [42]; height and weight were obtained by parent-report [44, 70]; options for 2–3 h and 4–5 h were missing from the Likert-type scale used to assess screen time [74]; applied accelerometry cut-points were not validated for the age group of interest [47]. Potential attrition bias: amount of unexplained missing exposure or outcome data is unknown [42, 50] or ranged from 14% to 67% [39, 40, 42, 43, 59, 60, 69, 71, 73, 74, 76], and reason may be related to the true outcome of interest [40, 43, 66, 71]. Potential selective reporting bias: statistics for non-significant relationships were not reported [48, 64]; authors decided post-hoc not to report analyses with continuous exposure variables [59]; only final model was reported [44]; results for correlations described in the methods section were not reported [62]; composite outcomes were presented without individual components; results for categorical screen time and total screen time described in the methods section were not reported [32]; outcomes from pooled hierarchical linear regression and variance information of included results were not reported [70]. Did not account for potentially important confounding variables or mediating factors: diet [43, 45, 46, 50, 58, 60, 63, 64, 67, 71, 72, 77, 80]; sugar-sweetened beverage consumption; and sleep [33]. Controlled for physical activity [59, 61, 66, 78]. Sleep during the day was considered sedentary time [40]
nThe quality of evidence from the cross-sectional studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and motor development
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | ||||
| Participant ages at time of exposure measurement ranged from ~4 mo (0.3 yr) to 3–4 years; the oldest mean age at follow-up was 5.4 years. Data were collected cross-sectionally and up to 3 years of follow-up. Motor development indicators were assessed by parent-report unless otherwise indicated; specific indicators were: age at first sitting, age at first crawling, age at first walking, locomotion/locomotor skills (assessed by a “test of gross motor development” or CHAMPS Motor Skill Protocol), motor skill development (assessed by the PDMS-2 or CHAMPS Motor Skill Protocol), motor skills (assessed by a “neurological optimality score”), object control (assessed by a “test of gross motor development”, or CHAMPS Motor Skill Protocol), and visual-motor abilities (assessed by the WRAVMA test). | ||||||||
| 3413 (3) | Longitudinala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowc |
| 681 (4) | Cross-sectionald | Serious risk of biase | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowf |
CHAMPS Children’s Activity and Movement in Preschool Study, PDMS-2 Peabody Developmental Motor Scales–second edition, WRAVMA Wide-Range Assessment of Visual Motor Ability
aIncludes 3 longitudinal studies [88, 91, 92] from 3 unique samples
bSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of exposure measure [88, 91, 92]
cThe quality of evidence from longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
dIncludes 4 cross-sectional studies [37, 40, 93, 94] from 4 unique samples
eSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of exposure measure [93, 94]; large amount (30.9%) of unexplained missing data and pattern of nonresponse indicates reason for missing data may have been related to the outcome of interest [40]; sleep during the day was included in sedentary time exposure [40]
fThe quality of evidence from cross-sectional studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and psychosocial health
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | ||||
| The range of mean ages at time of exposure measurement was ~1 to 4.3 years; the oldest mean age at follow-up was ~12 years. Data were collected by randomized trial, cross-sectionally, and up to 9.5 years of follow-up. Psychosocial health measures were: aggression toward a sibling (assessed by the Aggressive Sibling Social Behavior Scale); aggressive behaviours/aggression, delinquent behaviours, total behaviour problems, externalizing problems, internalizing problems, emotional reactivity, anxious or depressed symptoms, and attention problems (assessed by the CBCL or Japanese CBCL); attentional problems (assessed by the hyperactivity subscale of the BPI); attention problems and hyperactivity (assessed by the BASC-2); bullying (assessed by unpublished questionnaire); co-operation, assertion, responsibility, self-control, and total social skills (assessed by the Social Skills Rating System); emotional symptoms/problems, conduct problems, hyperactivity-inattention, peer problems, and prosocial behaviour (assessed using the SDQ); self-esteem, emotional well-being, family functioning, and social networks (assessed using the KINDLR); social-emotional competence (assessed by the MIT-SEA); soothability, sociability, and emotionality (assessed by the CTQ); victimization, anxiety, physical aggression, and prosocial behaviour (assessed by the SBQ); and risk of being a bully, victim, or bully-victim (assessed by unpublished questionnaire). | ||||||||
| 412 (1) | Randomized triala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Moderatee |
| 13,301 (9) | Longitudinalf | Serious risk of biasg | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowh |
| 9429 (7) | Cross-sectionali | Serious risk of biasj | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowk |
BASC-2 Behavior Assessment System for Children, BPI Behavior Problems Index, CBCL Child Behavior Checklist, CTQ Child Temperament Questionnaire, KINDL Questionnaire for Measuring Health-Related Quality of Life in Children and Adolescents-Revised Version, MIT-SEA Modified Infant-Toddler Social and Emotional Assessment, SBQ Social Behavior Questionnaire, SDQ Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
aIncludes 1 randomized controlled trial [34]
bSerious risk of bias. Unclear if allocation was adequately concealed prior to group assignment; group allocation was adequately concealed from control, but not intervention group during the study; knowledge of outcome of interest was not prevented and outcome measurement is likely to have been influenced by lack of blinding; baseline data were not reported, making it impossible to determine if baseline imbalances existed between groups [34]
cScreen time was significantly lower in the intervention vs control group at 2-, 6-, and 9-month follow-up post-intervention (mean ± SD: 2 month: 39.48 ± 16.36 vs 86.64 ± 21.63 min/day; 6 month: 24.72 ± 4.45 vs 84.95 ± 14.77 min/day; 9 month: 21.15 ± 6.12 vs 93.96 ± 18.84 min/day; all p < 0.001)
dIntervention: 3 printed materials and interactive CDs and one counselling call, intending to decrease screen time; 8-week duration. Control: Usual care; unaware of counselling interventions
eThe quality of evidence from the randomized trial was downgraded from “high” to “moderate” because of a serious risk of bias in the single randomized controlled trial that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
fIncludes 9 longitudinal studies [90, 92, 95–97, 99, 100, 102, 103] from 6 unique samples. Verlinden et al. [97, 99] reported data from the Generation R Study; and Pagani et al. [90, 92] and Watt et al. [95] reported data from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development (QLSCD). Results are presented separately and participants are counted only once
gSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of television duration exposure measure [90, 92, 97, 99, 100, 102, 103]; questionable validity and reliability of television duration exposure measure on weekdays only [96]; poor reliability of outcome measures for responsibility [102] and emotional symptoms, conduct problems, peer problems, and prosocial behaviour [100]; large amount of unexplained missing data and pattern of nonresponse indicates reason for missing data may have been related to the outcome of interest [97]; complete results were not reported for all relationships examined [99]
hThe quality of evidence from longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
iIncludes 7 cross-sectional studies [98, 100, 101, 103–106] from 7 unique samples
jSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of television duration exposure measure [98, 100, 101, 103, 105, 106]; poor reliability of outcome measures for emotional symptoms, conduct problems, peer problems, and prosocial behaviour [100]; small amount (218/4020) of unexplained missing outcome data at 3-year follow-up [92]
kThe quality of evidence from cross-sectional studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and cognitive development
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | ||||
| The range of mean ages at time of exposure measurement was ~0.5 to 4.4 years; the oldest age range at follow-up was 9 to 10 years. Data were collected cross-sectionally and up to 8 years of follow-up. Cognitive development indicators were: ADHD symptoms (assessed by checklists based on the DSM-IV); attentional problems (assessed by the BPI); attention span (assessed by the CTQ); classroom engagement (assessed by a Classroom Engagement Scale and an unpublished questionnaire); cognitive ability (assessed by the Imitation Sorting Task); cognitive development (assessed by BSID-II and BSID-III); cognitive inhibitory control (assessed by the Animal Stroop Task); executive function (assessed as a composite of cognitive inhibitory control and working memory capacity; the BASC-2; four tasks: grass/snow, whisper, backward digit span, tower); language development (total), auditory comprehension, expressive communication (assessed by ASQ, PLS-4, CELF-P2, CELF-4, CDI, K-ASQ, Thai CLAMS, medical diagnosis, and developmental assessment with Denver-II test); mathematical success (assessed as relative to the class distribution); mathematics, reading recognition, reading comprehension (assessed by the PIAT); number knowledge (assessed by NKT); receptive and total vocabulary (assessed by PPVT); short-term memory (assessed by the Memory for Digit Span of the WISC); speech disorders (assessed by the Chuturik test and Child Behavior Checklist by Achenbach, conversation with parents, and clinical examination); and working memory capacity (assessed using the Animal Stroop Task and K-ABC number recall test). | ||||||||
| 8927 (11) | Longitudinala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowc |
| 166 (1) | Case-controld | Serious risk of biase | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowf |
| 9330 (16) | Cross-sectionalg | Serious risk of biash | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision | None |
| Very lowi |
ADHD Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder, ASQ Ages and Stages Questionnaire, BASC-2 Behavior Assessment System for Children, BSID-II and BSID-III Bayley Scales of Infant Development–second and third editions, BPI Behavioral Problems Index, CDI Communicative Development Inventory, CELF-P2 Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals–Preschool, CELF-4 Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals Fourth Edition, CLAMS Clinical Linguistic Auditory Milestone Scale, CTQ Child Temperament Questionnaire, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders–4, K-ABC Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, K-ASQ Korean–Ages and Stages Questionnaire, NKT Number Knowledge Test, PIAT Peabody Individual Achievement Test, PLS-4 Preschool Language Scale–4, PPVT Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, WISC Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children
aIncludes 11 longitudinal studies [88, 90, 92, 100, 102, 112, 113, 119–122] from 8 unique samples. Tomopoulos et al. [112] reported data from the Bellevue Project for Early Language, Literacy, and Education Success (BELLE); McKean et al. [121] reported data from the Early Language in Victoria Study (ELVS); Pagani et al. [90, 92] reported data from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development (QLSCD); Schmidt et al. [88] reported data from Project Viva; and Foster and Watkins [113], Christakis et al. [120] and Zimmerman and Christakis [119] reported data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, Children, and Young Adults (NLSY-Child). Results are presented separately and participants are counted only once
bSerious risk of bias. Questionable validity and reliability of television duration exposure measure in all studies [88, 90, 92, 100, 102, 112, 113, 119–122]; poor reliability of Attention Problems subscale of the Child Behavior Checklist (ɑ =0.59) [102]; possible reporting bias, because the relationship between TV exposure and BMI at age 3 yr was analyzed despite not being described in the methods section [88]; two studies had unexplained missing data (34% and 40% missing) and the pattern of nonresponse indicates the reason for missing data may have been related to the outcome of interest [112, 121]; data were reported incompletely for the relationship between TV exposure and reading achievement [90]; the methods section of one study indicated that bivariate analysis would be performed, but included variables and the results of the analysis were not reported [121]
cThe quality of evidence from longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
dIncludes 1 case-control study [116]
eSerious risk of bias. Exposure measure was described in poor detail; questionable validity and reliability of television duration exposure measure; the Denver II Scale is useful for detecting severe developmental problems but has been criticized as being unreliable for predicting less severe or specific problems; the regression model that predicted developmental delay from a composite of “age of onset of TV viewing” and “TV viewing >2 h/day” was not pre-specified in the methods, and composite variables were not combined in analyses with other outcomes [116]
fThe quality of evidence from the case-control study was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
gIncludes 16 cross-sectional studies [90, 94, 100, 104, 107–111, 114, 115, 117, 118, 121, 123, 124]. Zimmerman et al. [117] and Ferguson and Donnellan [124] reported data from the same sample. Results are presented separately and participants are counted only once
hSerious risk of bias. Potentially inappropriate sampling technique resulted in a sample with higher income and education than the overall population from which it was recruited [117, 124]; questionable validity and reliability of the exposure measure [90, 106–109, 111, 115, 117, 121–124]; questionable validity of exposure measure [94]; validation study showed overestimation of TV time exposure measure [110]; questionable validity and/or reliability of the outcome measure [109, 110]; unknown amount [109, 117] or between 28% and 60% [121, 124] of unexplained missing data and pattern of nonresponse indicates reason for missing data may have been related to the outcome of interest; incomplete reporting of exposure [109] and outcome [90, 110]; longitudinal relationships were reportedly collected but not reported in the results [115]; the methods section of one study indicated that bivariate analysis would be performed, but included variables and the results of the analysis were not reported [121]
iThe quality of evidence from longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and bone and skeletal health
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | ||||
| The mean age was 4.4 years. Data were collected cross-sectionally. Bone and skeletal health were assessed objectively using quantitative ultrasound. | |||||||
| 1512 (1) | Cross-sectionala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | Serious imprecisionc |
| Very lowd |
MVPA moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, SI bone stiffness index
aIncludes 1 cross-sectional study that reported data from the Identification and prevention of dietary- and lifestyle-induced health effects in children and infants (IDEFICS) sample [125]
bSerious risk of bias. Study participants were selected by “judgment sample”; questionable validity and reliability of subjective and objective exposure measures, and of quantitative ultrasound for measurement of bone stiffness in children [125]
cSerious imprecision. It was not possible to estimate the precision of the findings since the study did not provide a measure of variability in the results
dThe quality of evidence from the cross-sectional study was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of: (1) a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects, and (2) serious imprecision
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and cardiometabolic health
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | ||||
| The mean age was 3.1 years. Data were collected cross-sectionally. Cardiometabolic health was assessed using an objective measure of blood pressure. | |||||||
| 276 (1) | Cross-sectionala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | No serious indirectness | No serious imprecision |
| Very lowc |
aIncludes 1 cross-sectional study [126]
bSerious risk of bias. Unknown reliability and validity of the exposure measure [126]
cThe quality of evidence from the cross-sectional study was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects
The relationship between sedentary behaviour and fitness
| No. of participants (No. of studies) | Design | Quality assessment | Absolute effect | Quality | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | ||||
| The mean age at exposure measurement ranged from ~29 to 53 months (~2.4 to 4.4 yr). Data were collected longitudinally up to 8 years of follow-up. Fitness was assessed as: lower body explosive strength (standing long jump) and fitness level (parent-report level relative to other children). | |||||||
| 1314 (2) | Longitudinala | Serious risk of biasb | No serious inconsistency | Serious indirectnessc | No serious imprecision |
| Very lowd |
aIncludes 2 longitudinal studies [89, 90] from 1 unique sample (QLSCD)
bSerious risk of bias. Questionable reliability and validity of the exposure [89, 90] and outcome [90] measures; large unexplained loss to follow-up and unclear if included participants differed from missing participants [89]; controlled for physical activity [89, 90]
cSerious indirectness. Differences between outcomes of included studies and those of interest; only one study reported a measure of lower-body musculoskeletal fitness (lower-body strength assessed by standing long-jump performance) [89], and one study reported an indirect measure of physical fitness [90]. No studies reported direct measures of total body musculoskeletal or cardiovascular fitness
dThe quality of evidence from the longitudinal studies was downgraded from “low” to “very low” because of: 1) a serious risk of bias that diminished the level of confidence in the observed effects, and 2) indirectness of the comparisons being assessed
High-level summary of findings by health indicator
| Health indicator | Number of studies | Quality of evidence | Summary of findings: Number of studies reporting unfavourable/null/favourable associations with at least one health indicator measure by SB typea |
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| Adiposity | 60 | Very low to moderate |
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| Motor development | 7 | Very low |
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| Psychosocial health | 15 | Very low to moderate |
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| Cognitive development | 25 | Very low |
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| Bone and skeletal health | 1 | Very low |
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| Cardiometabolic health | 1 | Very low |
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| Fitness | 2 | Very low |
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| Risks / harms | 0 | N/A | N/A |
aNote that the number of studies reporting unfavourable/null/favourable associations does not sum to the total number of studies for a given indicator since some studies reported mixed associations. N/A: not applicable