| Literature DB >> 30616565 |
Valerie Carson1, Eun-Young Lee2, Kylie D Hesketh3, Stephen Hunter2, Nicholas Kuzik2, Madison Predy2, Ryan E Rhodes4, Christina M Rinaldi5, John C Spence2, Trina Hinkley3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The growth and development that occurs in early childhood has long-term implications, therefore understanding the relevant determinants is needed to inform early prevention and intervention. The objectives of the study were to examine: 1) the longitudinal associations of physical activity and sedentary behavior with social skills and 2) how physical activity and sedentary behavior track over three time-points.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerometer; Physical activity; Sedentary behavior; Social skills; Toddlers
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30616565 PMCID: PMC6323658 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6381-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Participant Characteristics
| Demographic variables | Time 1 (2014/2015) ( | Time 2 (2015/2016) ( | Time 3 (2016/2017) ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children’s characteristics | |||
| Age (years) | 1.6 (0.2) | 2.7 (0.3) | 3.7 (0.4) |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 50.6 | – | – |
| Female | 49.4 | – | – |
| Parental characteristics | |||
| Age (years) | 33.4 (5.0) | – | – |
| Sex | |||
| Male | 13.9 | 14.1 | 7.8 |
| Female | 86.1 | 85.9 | 92.2 |
| Highest level of education ( | |||
| High school (grades 9–12) | 14.4 | – | – |
| Community/Technical college | 27.2 | – | – |
| University | 38.0 | – | – |
| Post-graduate | 20.4 | – | – |
Values represent mean (standard deviation) for continuous values, and percentage for categorical values
A missing value means this question was not asked at the respective time point
Associations of sedentary behavior and physical activity with social competence over three time-points
| Express | Comply | Disruptb | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| b (95% CI) | b (95% CI) | b (95% CI) | ||||
| Accelerometer-derived | ||||||
| Sedentary time (10 min/day)a | − 0.083 (− 0.182, 0.017) | 0.105 | 0.018 (− 0.080, 0.115) | 0.722 | 0.004 (− 0.004, 0.011) | 0.312 |
| LPA (10 min/day)a | 0.129 (− 0.023, 0.282) | 0.097 | 0.001 (− 0.150, 0.151) | 0.992 | − 0.005 (− 0.014, 0.005) | 0.339 |
| MVPA (10 min/day)a | 0.069 (− 0.201, 0.338) | 0.619 | 0.013 (− 0.170, 0.196) | 0.891 | −0.002 (− 0.016, 0.017) | 0.738 |
| Parental-reported | ||||||
| Screen time (10 min/day) |
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| Television/videos (10 min/day) |
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| Video/computer games (10 min/day) |
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| 0.001 (− 0.005, 0.006)d | 0.827 |
PREPS Parents’ Role in Establishing healthy Physical activity and Sedentary behaviour habits. This project took place in Edmonton, Canada
b (95% CI) Unstandardized beta coefficients and 95% confidence intervals; min/day minutes per day
aStandardized for wear time
bDisrupt values at time 2 and time 3 were log-transformed
cAssociation was no longer significant (p = 0.09) when one influential observation was removed based on the Cook’s distance value
dAssociation approached significance (p = 0.09) when eight observations were removed based on the Cook’s distance value
< 0.05
Sedentary behavior and physical activity over three time-points
| Time 1b | Time 2b | Time 3b | b (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accelerometer-derived | |||||
| Sedentary time (min/day)a | 318.4 (41.6) | 334.2 (50.0) | 352.1 (47.2) |
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| LPA (min/day)a | 237.8 (29.3) | 259.1 (35.6) | 273.2 (30.2) |
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| MVPA (min/day)a | 59.0 (19.7) | 73.2 (24.6) | 89.8 (29.1) |
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| Parental-reported | |||||
| Screen time (min/day) | 71.8 (18.9–154.3) | 94.3 (50.5–197.1) | 120.0 (53.6–188.6) |
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| Television/videos (min/day) | 60.0 (15.4–122.1) | 81.4 (41.8–173.6) | 87.9 (50.4–147.9) |
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| Video/computer games (min/day) | 0.0 (0.0–8.6) | 0.0 (0.0–25.7) | 5.7 (0.0–38.6) |
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aStandardized for wear time
bValues represent mean (standard deviation) for variables normally distributed and median (inter-quartile range) for variables not normally distributed
< 0.05