| Literature DB >> 29546180 |
Lynda M Hegarty1, Jacqueline L Mair2, Karen Kirby3, Elaine Murtagh4, Marie H Murphy2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Prolonged, uninterrupted periods of sedentary time may be associated with increased risk of Type II diabetes, cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality even if the minimum recommended levels of daily physical activity are achieved. It is reported that children spend approximately 80% of their day engaged in sedentary behaviours. Since children spend a large portion of their waking time at school, school-based interventions targeting excessive or interrupted periods of sedentary time have been investigated in a number of studies. However, results of the effectiveness of studies to-date have been inconsistent. AIM: To conduct a systematic review to evaluate the effectiveness of school-based interventions designed to reduce sedentary behaviour on objectively measured sedentary time in children.Entities:
Keywords: children; intervention; school; sedentary behaviour; standing desks
Year: 2016 PMID: 29546180 PMCID: PMC5689814 DOI: 10.3934/publichealth.2016.3.520
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIMS Public Health ISSN: 2327-8994
Search strategy used in Ovid® Medline.
| Searches | |
| 1. | Sedentary Lifestyle/ |
| 2. | sedentary.tw. |
| 3. | sitting.tw. |
| 4. | 1 or 2 or 3 |
| 5. | “teacher*”.tw. |
| 6. | Schools/ |
| 7. | (school or schools).mp. (mp = title, abstract, original title, name of substance word, subject heading word, keyword heading word, protocol supplementary concept word, rare disease supplementary concept word, unique identifier) |
| 8. | 5 or 6 or 7 |
| 9. | exp Child/ |
| 10. | (child* or preschool* or pre school*).tw. |
| 11. | 9 or 10 |
| 12. | 4 and 8 and 11 |
Figure 1.Flow diagram of search results and included studies.
Characteristics of included studies.
| Studies | Participants | Details of Intervention | |||||||
| Aminian et al., (2015) | 26 | New Zealand | 9–11 | m f | N/A | 9 weeks | Full school day | 5 | activPAL |
| Breslin et al. (2012) | 416 | UK | 8–9 | m f | Sport for LIFE | 12 weeks | 1 hour | 1 | Actigraph |
| Carson et al. (2013) | 268 | Australia | 7–9 | m f | Transform Us! | 18 months | 30 mins | 5 | Actigraph |
| Clemes et al. (2015) | 74 | UK and Australia | 9–12 | m f | N/A | 9–10 weeks | UK group: minimum of 1 hour per day. Australian group: full school day | 5 | activPAL |
| Fairclough et al. (2013) | 318 | UK | 10–11 | m f | CHANGE! Project | 20 weeks | 60 mins | 1 | Actigraph |
| Hinckson et al. (2013) | 30 | New Zealand | 9–11 | m f | N/A | 4 weeks | Full school day | 5 | activPAL |
| Kipping et al. (2014) | 2221 | UK | 8–10 | m f | Active for Life Year 5 (AFLY5) | 1 school year | Varied | Varied | Actigraph |
| Verloigne et al. (2012) | 372 | Belgium1 | 9–11 | m f | UP4FUN | 6 weeks | Not specified | 1–2 | Actigraph |
1 Intervention implemented in Belgium, Germany, Greece, Hungary and Norway but activPAL data related to Belgian sample only.
Risk of bias in included studies.
| Authors & Year | Adequate sequence generation? | Allocation concealment? | Blinding of participants and personnel? | Blinding of outcome assessors? | Incomplete outcome data addressed? | Free of selective reporting? | Free of other bias? | |
| 1 | Aminian et al. (2015) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | High |
| 2 | Breslin et al. (2012) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High |
| 3 | Clemes et al. (2015) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear |
| 4 | Carson et al. (2013) | Low | Unclear | High | Unclear | High | High | Low |
| 5 | Fairclough et al. (2013) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High | High | Unclear | Low |
| 6 | Hinckson et al. (2015) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High |
| 7 | Kipping et al. (2014) | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low |
| 8 | Verloigne et al. (2012) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High | Unclear | High |
| 9 | Verloigne et al. (2015) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High | Unclear | High |
| 10 | Vik et al. (2015) | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Unclear | High |
| 11 | Yildirim et al. (2014) | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High | Unclear | Low |
Intervention effects of the included studies.
| Authors & Year | Nature of Intervention | Intervention Effects |
| Aminian et al. (2015) | Standing workstations replaced traditional desks. Exercise balls, beanbags and mat space. | Overall mean sitting time (hours; mean ± SD): Intervention: pre, 9.56 ± 1.27; post, 7.64 ± 2.06. Control: pre, 9.34 ± 1.32; post, 8.08 ± 3.10. Mean sitting time during school (hours; mean ± SD): Intervention: pre, 3.88 ±0.36; post, 2.81 ± 0.36. Control: pre, 3.59 ± 0.45; post, 3.24 ± 0.81. Decrease in weekday sitting time: 45 minutes (CL ± 122). Moderate reduction by possibly 36 minutes in sitting time during school but results unclear. |
| Breslin et al. (2012) | Education theory and activities led by teacher. | Intervention group: lower levels of sedentary behaviour at follow-up compared to baseline. Significant main effects: F(1,49) = 5.585; |
| Carson et al. (2013) | Combination of strategies using the curriculum, in-house activities, physical environment & home setting | 13.3 minute decrease in weekday sitting time in arm of intervention that aimed to increase PA and reduce SB (significant). Total effect on total weekday sedentary time was –13.28 (–24.37, 2.20) (95% CI). |
| Clemes et al. (2015) | UK study: participants were rotated around 6 sit-to-stand desks so that they stood for at least one hour per day. Australian study: sit-to-stand desks replaced all traditional desks and participants stood for a minimum of 30 mins per day. In both studies, teachers provided information on benefits of reducing sedentary behaviour and classroom sitting time. | Sitting during class (% of wear time): UK sample: Intervention: pre, 71.8 ± 10.6; post, 62 ± 15.8 ( |
| Fairclough et al. (2013) | Teacher-led curriculum, learning resources, homework tasks, CD-ROM. Teacher received 4 hours of training in the delivery of the curriculum resource. | Compared with baseline data, 28 minutes more sedentary time in intervention group post-intervention but 8.5 minutes less at follow-up. Effect for sedentary time: |
| Hinckson et al. (2015) | Standing workstations replaced traditional desks. | Sitting Time (hours; mean ± SD): Intervention: pre, 9.26 ± 1.15; post, 8.27 ± 1.45. Control: pre, 9.30 ± 1.46; post, 9.00 ± 0.80. Effect size (90% CL): 0.49 (0.64). |
| Kipping et al. (2014) | Teachers trained to deliver 16 sessions — 10 of which had associated homework. Child-parent interactive homework tasks also. | Difference in means between intervention and control group of -0.11 (–9.71 to 9.49) minutes per day less sitting (non-significant). |
| Verloigne et al. (2012) | Teacher delivered 1–2 intervention lessons per week. Manual given to teachers who were trained by researcher. Each week had a specific theme. | Effects: Sedentary time ( |