| Literature DB >> 29219094 |
Anthony D Okely1,2, Davina Ghersi3,4, Kylie D Hesketh5, Rute Santos6,7, Sarah P Loughran8,9, Dylan P Cliff6,8, Trevor Shilton10, David Grant11, Rachel A Jones6,8, Rebecca M Stanley6,8, Julie Sherring6, Trina Hinkley3, Stewart G Trost12, Clare McHugh13, Simon Eckermann14, Karen Thorpe15, Karen Waters16, Timothy S Olds17, Tracy Mackey18, Rhonda Livingstone19, Hayley Christian20, Harriette Carr21, Adam Verrender8,9, João R Pereira6, Zhiguang Zhang6, Katherine L Downing5, Mark S Tremblay22.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2017, the Australian Government funded the update of the National Physical Activity Recommendations for Children 0-5 years, with the intention that they be an integration of movement behaviours across the 24-h period. The benefit for Australia was that it could leverage research in Canada in the development of their 24-h guidelines for the early years. Concurrently, the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) working group published a model to produce guidelines based on adoption, adaption and/or de novo development using the GRADE evidence-to-decision framework. Referred to as the GRADE-ADOLOPMENT approach, it allows guideline developers to follow a structured and transparent process in a more efficient manner, potentially avoiding the need to unnecessarily repeat costly tasks such as conducting systematic reviews. The purpose of this paper is to outline the process and outcomes for adapting the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years to develop the Australian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years guided by the GRADE-ADOLOPMENT framework.Entities:
Keywords: GRADE-ADOLOPMENT; Infants; Methodology; Preschoolers; Public health recommendations; Toddlers
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29219094 PMCID: PMC5773882 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4867-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Timeline and sequence of steps involved in the development of the Australian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years (birth to 5 years): An Integration of Physical Activity, Sedentary Behaviour, and Sleep. (refs: [11, 24]). Abbreviations: EtD: evidence-to-decision frameworks; GRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation; PICO: Population, Intervention, Comparator, and Outcome
Guideline Consensus Panel
| Panel Member | Affiliation | Role | Conflict of Interest Declaration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Research Experts | |||
| Kylie Hesketh | Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia | Researcher, expert PA | Receive funding from ARC, NHMRC and Heart Foundation. |
| Rute Santos | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Researcher, expert SB | I have a Discovery Early Career Research Award from the Australian Research Council. |
| Sarah Loughran | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Researcher, expert Sleep | Current funding and subsequent publications on screen time, mobile phones and sleep in children (NHMRC), including two opinion pieces in The Conversation on screen time and sleep. |
| Dylan Cliff | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Researcher, expert SB, PA, compositional analyses | Has received funding from ARC and NHMRC |
| Stewart Trost | Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia | Researcher, expert PA, SB | Received funding from NIH, ARC, and NHMRC. |
| Hayley Christian | University of Western Australia, Australia | Researcher, expert PA, SB | Current research funding from Healthway for related projects. |
| Anthony Okely | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Chair, researcher, content expert PA, SB | Have received funding from NHMRC and ARC for related projects |
| Rachel Jones | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Researcher, expert knowledge translation | Consultancy to Early Childhood Australia to deliver Munch & Move Professional Development for early childhood educators in NSW. |
| Trina Hinkley | Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia | Researcher, expert SB, PA | Funded by NHMRC ECF: PA/SB in early childhood. Pending ARC DECRA focusing on screen time in early childhood |
| Tim Olds | University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia | Expert sleep, compositional analyses | Employment 0.4 Research Professor University of South Australia |
| Karen Thorpe | University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland (formerly at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia) | Researcher, expert in sleep | Employment: University of Queensland |
| Rebecca Stanley | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Researcher, expert stakeholder consultation, | Funded by NSW Health Early-Mid Career fellow (from 25 May 2017). |
| Katherine Downing | Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia | PhD student for Systematic review of Physical Activity | Funded through an NHMRC Postgraduate Scholarship. Has published journal articles on children’s sedentary behaviour. Has given presentations on children’s sedentary behaviour |
| Zhiguang Zhang | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | PhD student for Systematic review Integrated Movement Behaviours | Funded through an PhD scholarship from the China Scholarship Council |
| Joao Pereira | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | PhD student for Systematic review on Sedentary Behaviour | Funded through an UOW University Postgraduate Award Postgraduate scholarship |
| Adam Verrender | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | PhD student for Systematic review on Sleep | Funded through a joint NHMRC and UOW Postgraduate Scholarship |
| Stakeholder Group and Knowledge Users | |||
| David Grant | Commonwealth Department of Health, Canberra, Australia | Stakeholder, end user | |
| Trevor Shilton | National Heart Foundation of Australia, Perth, Australia | Stakeholder, cardiovascular health, messaging | Member of the Board, International Society of Physical Activity and HealthMember of the Board International Union for Health Promotion and Education. |
| Tracy Mackey | Executive Director, Early Childhood, NSW Dept of Education | Stakeholder | Nil |
| Rhonda Livingstone | Australian Children’s Education & Care Quality Authority (ACECQA) | Stakeholder | A member of the Executive Team (and National Education Leader) of ACECQA |
| Karen Waters | Children’s Hospital Westmead and University of Sydney | Paediatrician, expert Sleep | Nil |
| Alice Pryor | Parents Voice | Parent advocate | |
| Clare McHugh | Early Childhood Australia, Canberra, Australia | Stakeholder | As part of my work with Early Childhood Australia, I manage the Digital Business Kit grant (Commonwealth ending June 2017) am an investigator on Smart Start (Research Coordinator) and coordinate online resources to support good pedagogical practices with technology, educators and young children. |
| International Collaborators | |||
| Mark Tremblay | Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada | Chair of Canadian Guideline Panel, researcher, content expert PA, SB. | I have no financial interests but I am involved in the Canadian 24 Hour Guidelines for the Early Years (0–4 years). An integration of Physical Activity, Sedentary Behaviour and Sleep – and this involvement may be perceived as a conflict of interest. My expenses to attend the Australian Guideline Development meeting were covered but I received no honorarium. I donated my time for all aspects of my involvement. |
| Harriette Carr | New Zealand Ministry of Health, Wellington, New Zealand | Stakeholder, international | During the period of development of the Australian Guidelines, New Zealand were finalising their new Sit Less, Move More, Sleep Well: Active Play Guidelines for under Fives (released May 2017). Due to the close relationship between Australia and New Zealand, we wanted to ensure that our respective Guidelines were broadly consistent. |
| Methodology Consultants and Project Management | |||
| Davina Ghersi | NHMRC (Canberra), Australia | GRADE-ADOLPMENT, AGREE methodology expert | I am an employee of NHMRC, an agency that approves and produces Guidelines. |
| Simon Eckermann | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Health Economist | I have no financial interests. I have developed methods that may be used as part of evaluation, that are completed in the text Health Economics from Theory to Practice (Eckermann, 2017) |
| Julie Sherring | University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia | Project management | I am Project Manager for the development of the Australian 24-h Movement Guidelines for Children of the Early Years. |
ACECQA Australian Children’s Education & Care Quality Authority, ARC Australian Research Council, ECA Early Childhood Australia, NHMRC National Health & Medical Research Council, NSW New South Wales, UOW University of Wollongong
Existing Early Years Guidelines
| Criteria | Australia | UK | Canada | New Zealand 2017a [ | Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Published in last 5y | N | N | Y | Y | Y |
| Followed GRADE process | N | N | Y | N | Y |
| Addressed clear questions (can identify PICO elements) | ? | N | Y | ? | Y |
| Had benefits and harms assessments | ? | ? | Y | ? | Y |
| Assessed using AGREE | N | N | Y | N | Y |
| Allowed for updating | ? | N | Y | ? | Y |
| Had existing and accessible evidence tables/summaries | ? | N | Y | N | Y |
| Had risk of bias assessment | N | N | Y | N | Y |
| Were integrated (24 h) | N | N | N | Y | Y |
Reference: Appendix 1. GRADE-ADOLOPMENT [11]
Y yes, N no, ? unsure
aunder development during guideline development process but made available to Australian Consensus Panel
Criteria for updating reviews
| Criterion | Minor update (all criteria must apply) |
|---|---|
| Prior Review (for question) | A credible systematic review exists |
| Full text reviewed for the Research Question of interest | ≤20 articles |
| New Studies | ≤5 studies |
| Evidence profile available? | Available |
| Outcomes all addressed | All important outcomes addressed |
Reference: Appendix 4: GRADE-ADOLOPMENT. [11]
Differences in the Australian Guidelines compared to the Canadian Guidelines
| Canadian Guidelines (Original) | Australian Guidelines | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Title | ||
|
|
| To identify the relevant country and age group |
| Preamble | ||
| These guidelines are relevant to all apparently healthy infants (less than 1 year), toddlers (1–2 years), and preschoolers | These guidelines are relevant to all apparently healthy infants (less than 1 year), toddlers (1–2 years), and preschoolers | In Australia, a child must start school before they are aged 6 years old. However some children start aged 4 years old, if they are close to turning 5 years old. Given this variation, the group came to consensus in stating the age group as |
| To encourage healthy growth and development, young children should receive support from | To promote healthy growth and development, young children should receive support from parents | Australia included |
| Guidelines | ||
|
|
| |
| For toddlers, a healthy 24 h includes: | For toddlers, a healthy 24 h includes: | The Australian group chose to utilise sub-headings for the three key areas despite the integrated approach. It was agreed that the use of subheadings assists the reader in understanding the context. These also appear for infants and preschoolers. |
| • Not being restrained for more than 1 h at a time (e.g., in a stroller or high chair) or sitting for extended periods. For those younger than 2 years, sedentary screen time is not recommended. For those aged 2 years, sedentary screen time should be no more than 1 h; less is better. When sedentary, engaging in pursuits like reading and storytelling with a caregiver is encouraged; | • | The Consensus group removed the term ‘at any intensity’ as it was agreed this was redundant given the inclusion of ‘energetic play’. |
| • 11 to 14 h of good quality sleep, including naps, with consistent bed- and wake-up times. | • | The Consensus group agreed to include car seat as one of the examples of equipment where children can be restrained for extended periods. This is repeated in the Infant Guidelines. |
| Replacing time restrained or sedentary screen time with additional energetic play, and | For greater health benefits, replace time restrained or sedentary screen time with additional energetic play, while preserving sufficient sleep. | The Australian group agreed we had not assessed evidence to enable consideration of whether or not to include the statement “ |
The text in bold indicates the differences between the Canadian and Australian Guidelines
Summary results of closed-ended stakeholder survey questions
| Question | Strongly agree, % ( | Somewhat agree, % ( | Neither agree nor disagree, % ( | Somewhat disagree, % ( | Strongly disagree, % ( | Total responses ( |
| Is the title clearly stated? | 49.8 (124) | 39.4 (98) | 3.2 (8) | 5.62 (14) | 2.0 (5) | 249 |
| Do you agree with the title? | 36.7 (91) | 44.4 (110) | 10.1 (25) | 7.3 (18) | 1.6 (4) | 248 |
| Is the preamble clearly stated? | 60.8 (124) | 35.8 (73) | 0.5(1) | 1.5 (3) | 1.5 (3) | 204 |
| Do you agree with the preamble? | 65.2 (133) | 30.8 (63) | 2.9 (6) | 1.0 (2) | 0 (0) | 204 |
| The Guidelines are clearly stated | 70.9 (139) | 25.0 (49) | 2.0 (4) | 2.0 (4) | 0 (0) | 196 |
| Do you agree with the Guidelines? | 63.3 (124) | 27.6 (54) | 2.0 (4) | 6.1 (12) | 1.0 (2) | 170 |
| Much more useful, % (n) | More useful, % (n) | Neutral, % (n) | Less useful, % (n) | Much less useful, % (n) | Total responses (n) | |
| In comparison to separate physical activity,sedentary behaviour, and sleep guidelines, do you find these integrated Guidelines… | 42.9 (82) | 43.5 (83) | 12.6 (24) | 0.6 (1) | 0.6 (1) | 191 |
Fig. 2Final Preamble. © 2012–2017 Commonwealth of Australia as represented by the Department of Health; all rights reserved
Fig. 3Final Guidelines. © 2012–2017 Commonwealth of Australia as represented by the Department of Health; all rights reserved
Summary of research needs to address gaps in relation to the development of 24-h integrated movement guidelines for the early years
| Research needs |
|---|
| General |
| • Timing and consistency studies needed for sedentary behaviour, physical activity and sleep |
| Physical activity |
| • More accurate ways of objectively measuring physical activity are needed (currently no valid and reliable accelerometer cut points for infants). |
| • More research needed to determine how MVPA is defined for young children, given the sporadic nature of their activity. |
| • More evidence on the associations between light-intensity physical activity and health and development outcomes is needed and how light-intensity physical activity is defined. |
| • Better evidence needed for “a variety of ways” (for infant guidelines). |
| • More evidence needed overall for infants. |
| Sedentary behaviour |
| • No evidence was “high quality” (only 2 RCTs and several limitations across studies). |
| • Only one longitudinal study used objective measures of sedentary behaviour (e.g., accelerometers). |
| • No studies examined newer/evolving technologies that contribute to sedentary time (e.g., tablets, FaceTime/Skype, small screens); only 1 study examined mobile phone use. |
| • Few studies examined certain sedentary behaviour exposures (e.g., sitting, supine position, reading, internet, sedentary quiet play). |
| • Difficult to define and measure “sedentary behaviour” in infants given the child/adult concept of “breaking up sedentary behaviour” may not be relevant to non-walking infants. |
| Sleep |
| The review only focused on sleep duration |
| • Many other important factors beyond sleep duration should be considered in the development of sleep recommendations, including aspects of sleep |
| • In addition, sleep duration in the early years is generally comprised of both daytime and night time sleep. However, it has been reported that the effects of daytime sleep on health may not be the same as night time sleep, with positive effects of sleep duration suggested to relate to the stage in sleep transition from polyphasic to monophasic sleep during which naps cease Multiple age groups (e.g., toddlers, preschoolers) were also grouped together, despite obvious differences in development |
| • Development progresses rapidly during the early years and many factors could have confounded the associations that have been reported (e.g., growth, eating habits, environment, locomotion, etc.) |
| • Ideally, future research should use narrower age groups that are aligned with the current sleep duration recommendations (e.g., newborns [0–3 months], infants [4–11 months], toddlers [1–2 y], preschoolers [3–5 y]) |
| The available evidence relies heavily on cross-sectional studies that use parent-reported sleep durations |
| • Subjective sleep reports are less reliable than objective measures of sleep. It is also well-known that parent-reported sleep duration overestimates actual sleep duration compared with objective measures. |
| • Subjective sleep reports are therefore valid for screening, but are less consistent and reliable in estimating sleep pattern variables such as sleep duration, night wakings, and sleep onset latency (Bauer and Blunden, 2008). |
| • Even when objective measurements are used, there is a wide variety of largely incommensurable metrics for duration, efficiency and fragmentation of sleep. Where possible, future research should include objective measures of sleep, with agreed metrics. Additionally, where only subjective measures are included the questions used to evaluate sleep should be carefully selected as this can greatly impact the validity of self-report |
Surveillance recommendations for the Australian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years (birth to 5 years). (adapted from the Surveillance recommendations for the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years)
| Physical activity | |||
| Australian Guideline | Specific Surveillance Recommendation | Rationale for specific surveillance recommendation | Recommendation for minimum inclusion in overall guideline surveillancea |
| Infants (aged <1 year) | |||
| Being physically active several times in a variety of ways, particularly through interactive floor-based play; more is better. | None | Currently there are no available benchmarks, further research is required | No |
| For those not yet mobile, this includes at least 30 min of tummy time spread throughout the day while awake | Total tummy time on the previous day is ≥30 min while awakeb | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Toddlers (aged 1–2 years) | |||
| At least 180 min spent in a variety of physical activities at any intensity, spread throughout the day; more is better. | Previous day physical activity is ≥180 min with at least some energetic play (MVPA)b | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Including energetic play | Previous day total physical activity is ≥180 min with at least some energetic play (MVPA)b | As there are no benchmarks for duration we suggest not having a minimum threshold for energetic play or MVPA in this age group. | No |
| Preschoolers (aged 3–5 years) | |||
| At least 180 min spent in a variety of physical activities spread throughout the day | Previous day total physical activity is ≥180 minutesb | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Of which at least 60 min is energetic play; more is better | Previous day MVPA is ≥60 minutesb | Yes | |
| Sedentary behaviour | |||
| Guideline | Specific Surveillance Recommendation | Rationale for specific surveillance recommendation | Recommendation for minimum inclusion in overall guideline surveillance |
| Infants (aged <1 year) | |||
| Infants | |||
| Not being restrained for more than 1 h at a time (e.g., in a stroller, car seat or high chair). | Time spent restrained is ≤1 h at a timed | Empirical evidence substantiating this threshold is lacking though this threshold is aligned with earlier guidelines and has met with stakeholder and end-user acceptance | No |
| When sedentary, engaging in pursuits such as reading and storytelling with a caregiver is encouraged | None | Currently there are no available benchmarks, further research is required. | No |
| Toddlers (aged 1–2 years) | |||
| Not being restrained for more than 1 h at a time (e.g., in a stroller, car seat or high chair). | Time spent restrained is ≤1 h at a timed | Empirical evidence substantiating this threshold is lacking though this threshold is aligned with earlier guidelines and has met with stakeholder and end-user acceptance | No |
| Or sitting for extended periods | None | Currently there are no available benchmarks to be more specific for “sitting for extended periods”, further research is required. | No |
| When sedentary, engaging in pursuits such as reading and storytelling with a caregiver is encouraged | None | Currently there are no available benchmarks, further research is required | |
| Preschoolers (aged 3–5 years) | |||
| Not being restrained for more than 1 h at a time (e.g., in a stroller or car seat). | Time spent restrained is ≤1 h at a timed | Empirical evidence substantiating this threshold is lacking though this threshold is aligned with earlier guidelines and has met with stakeholder and end-user acceptance | No |
| Or sitting for extended periods | Bouts of sedentary time | Currently there are no available benchmarks to be more specific for “sitting for extended periods”, further research is required. | No |
| When sedentary, engaging in pursuits such as reading and storytelling with a caregiver is encouraged | None | Currently there are no available benchmarks, further research is required | No |
| Screen time | |||
| Guideline | Specific Surveillance Recommendation | Rationale for specific surveillance recommendation | Recommendation for minimum inclusion in overall guideline surveillance |
| Infants (aged <1 year) | |||
| Screen time is not recommended. | Previous day includes no screen timec | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Toddlers (aged 1–2 years) | |||
| For those younger than 2 years, sedentary screen time is not recommended. | Previous day includes no screen timec | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| For those aged 2 years, sedentary screen time should be no more than 1 h per day; less is better | Sedentary screen time on previous day is ≤1 hourb | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Preschoolers (aged 3–5 years) | |||
| Sedentary screen time should be no more than 1 hour per day; less is better. | Sedentary screen time on previous day is ≤1 hourb | A representative day provides a more accurate recall and hence better estimate of the prevalence of the guideline in a population representative sample [ | Yes |
| Sleep | |||
| Guideline | Specific Surveillance Recommendation | Rationale for specific surveillance recommendation | Recommendation for minimum inclusion in overall guideline surveillance |
| Infants (aged <1 year) | |||
| 14 to 17 h (for those aged 0–3 months) of good quality sleep, including naps. | Sleep period time on previous night (offset minus onset), plus daytime naps for previous day. | Currently recommended by NSF, based on expert opinion. | Yes |
| 12 to 16 h (for those aged 4–11 months) of good quality sleep, including naps. | Sleep period time on previous night (offset minus onset), plus daytime naps for previous day. | Currently recommended by NSFe, based on expert opinion. | Yes |
| Toddlers (aged 1–2 years) | |||
| 11 to 14 h of good quality sleep, including naps, | Sleep period time on previous night (offset minus onset), plus daytime naps for previous day. | Currently recommended by NSF, based on expert opinion. | Yes |
| With consistent sleep and wake-up times | Day-to-day variability in sleep onset and offset times.f | Recommended as part of sleep hygiene. No evidence in this age group, but there is some evidence in adolescents ( | No |
| Preschoolers (aged 3–5 years) | |||
| 10 to 13 h of good quality sleep, which may include a nap, | Sleep period time on previous night (offset minus onset), plus daytime naps for previous day. | Currently recommended by NSF, based on expert opinion. | Yes |
| With consistent sleep and wake-up times | Day-to-day variability in sleep onset and offset times.f Bedtime and wake-up time should not typically vary by more than ±30 min including on weekendsg | Recommended as part of sleep hygiene. No evidence in this age group, but there is some evidence in adolescents ( | No |
aThese indicate the current recommended minimum inclusion recommendations for surveillance of meeting the 24-h guidelines. Other specific guideline recommendations, which have not been identified as recommended components for surveillance of meeting the 24-h guidelines, should still be measured for descriptive purposes and to determine if changes are occurring prospectively. As evidence grows and surveillance measures evolve for these other recommendations, updates to the minimum surveillance criteria may be required
bIf multiple representative day recalls are available (e.g., last three days) it is recommended to use these over just the previous day
cIt is understood that under special circumstances exposure to screen time may happen but should be rare or unusual
dIt is understood that under special circumstances being restrained in excess of 1 h at a time may occur but should be rare or unusual
eNote that the NSF actually recommends 12–15 h for this age group
fSurveillance requires the use of sleep diaries recording onset and offset times. Until there are better dose-response relationships between sleep variability and health outcomes, it is premature to recommend a particular goal (e.g. “within 30 min”). There are many ways this can be quantified. The simplest is the SD of onset and offset times over one week
gTo accurately assess consistency of bedtime and wake-up time data should be collected on both weekday and weekend days. If data from weekday and weekend days are available, it is recommended that the average variation in bedtime and wake-up time be weighted 2/7 for weekend days and 5/7 for weekdays to most accurately reflect average weekly measures