| Literature DB >> 33239009 |
Jean-Philippe Chaput1,2, Juana Willumsen3, Fiona Bull3, Roger Chou4, Ulf Ekelund5,6, Joseph Firth7,8, Russell Jago9,10, Francisco B Ortega11, Peter T Katzmarzyk12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization (WHO) released in 2020 updated global guidelines on physical activity and sedentary behaviour for children, adolescents, adults, older adults and sub-populations such as pregnant and postpartum women and those living with chronic conditions or disabilities.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Guidelines; Physical activity; Policy; Public health; Recommendations; Sedentary; Youth
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33239009 PMCID: PMC7691077 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-020-01037-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 6.457
Questions related to physical activity and sedentary behaviour in children and adolescents aged 5–17 years that were addressed by the WHO Youth Working Group
| 1. What is the association between physical activity and health-related outcomes? | |
| 2. Is there a dose-response association (volume, duration, frequency, intensity)? | |
| 3. Does the association vary by type or domain of physical activity? | |
| 1. What is the association between sedentary behaviour and health-related outcomes? | |
| 2. Is there a dose-response association (total volume and the frequency, duration and intensity of interruptions)? | |
| 3. Does the association vary by type or domain of sedentary behaviour? |
List of critical and important outcomes chosen by expert agreement among the WHO Guideline Development Group for children and adolescents aged 5–17 years
| Outcomes | Importance |
|---|---|
| Physical fitness (e.g., cardiorespiratory, motor development, muscular fitness) | Critical |
| Cardiometabolic health (e.g., blood pressure, dyslipidemia, glucose, insulin) | Critical |
| Bone health | Critical |
| Adiposity | Critical |
| Adverse effects (e.g., injuries and harms, respiratory effects of air pollution) | Critical |
| Mental health (e.g., depressive symptoms, self-esteem, anxiety symptoms, ADHD) | Critical |
| Cognitive outcomes (e.g., academic performance, executive function) | Critical |
| Prosocial behaviour (e.g., conduct problems, peer relations, social inclusion) | Important |
| Sleep duration and quality | Important |
List of systematic reviews included in the WHO search update
| Author, Year | Behaviour | Outcomes | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA | SB | Physical fitness | CM health | Bone health | Adiposity | AEs | Mental health | Cognitive outcomes | Prosocial behaviour | Sleep duration and quality | Number of included studies | AMSTAR 2 rating | |
| Bea, 2017 [ | X | X | 13 | Moderate | |||||||||
| Belmon, 2019 [ | X | X | 45 | Low | |||||||||
| Cao, 2019 [ | X | X | 17 | Low | |||||||||
| Collins, 2018 [ | X | X | 18 | Low | |||||||||
| Eddolls, 2017 [ | X | X | X | 13 | Low | ||||||||
| Errisuriz, 2018 [ | X | X | X | 12 | Critically Low | ||||||||
| Fang, 2019 [ | X | X | 16 | Low | |||||||||
| Koedijk, 2017 [ | X | X | 17 | Moderate | |||||||||
| Krahenbühl, 2018 [ | X | X | 21 | Critically Low | |||||||||
| Lee, 2018 [ | X | X | 27 | Critically Low | |||||||||
| Marker, 2019 [ | X | X | 24 | Low | |||||||||
| Marques, 2018 [ | X | X | 51 | Moderate | |||||||||
| Martin, 2017 [ | X | X | X | 15 | Moderate | ||||||||
| Miguel-Berges, 2018 [ | X | X | 36 | Low | |||||||||
| Mohammadi, 2019 [ | X | X | X | 17 | Low | ||||||||
| Pozuelo-Carrascosa, 2018 [ | X | X | 19 | Moderate | |||||||||
| Singh, 2019 [ | X | X | X | 58 | Critically Low | ||||||||
| Skrede, 2019 [ | X | X | X | 30 | Critically Low | ||||||||
| Stanczykiewicz, 2019 [ | X | X | 31 | Low | |||||||||
| Verswijveren, 2018 [ | X | X | 29 | Moderate | |||||||||
| Xue, 2019 [ | X | X | 19 | Low | |||||||||
Table produced by WHO and part of the Evidence Profiles available as a web annex to the main guideline document [13]
Abbreviations: AEs adverse effects, CM cardiometabolic, PA physical activity, SB sedentary behaviour
2020 WHO physical activity guidelines for children and adolescents (5–17 years)
For children and adolescents, physical activity can be undertaken as part of recreation and leisure (play, games, sports or planned exercise), physical education, transportation (wheeling, walking and cycling) or household chores, in the context of educational, home, and community settings. In children and adolescents, physical activity confers benefits for the following health outcomes: improved physical fitness (cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness), cardiometabolic health (blood pressure, dyslipidaemia, glucose, and insulin resistance), bone health, cognitive outcomes (academic performance, executive function), mental health (reduced symptoms of depression); and reduced adiposity. • Children and adolescents should do at least an average of 60 minutes per day of moderate- to vigorous-intensity, mostly aerobic, physical activity, across the week. • Vigorous-intensity aerobic activities, as well as those that strengthen muscle and bone, should be incorporated at least 3 days a week. ❖ ❖ ❖ ❖ |
2020 WHO sedentary behaviour guidelines for children and adolescents (5–17 years)
Sedentary behaviour is defined as time spent sitting or lying with low energy expenditure, while awake, in the context of educational, home, and community settings and transportation. In children and adolescents, higher amounts of sedentary behaviour are associated with the following poor health outcomes: increased adiposity; poorer cardiometabolic health, fitness, behavioural conduct/pro-social behaviour; and reduced sleep duration. • Children and adolescents should limit the amount of time spent being sedentary, particularly the amount of recreational screen time. |
List of key research gaps to be addressed to better inform future physical activity and sedentary behaviour guideline recommendations in children and adolescents aged 5–17 years
| 1. Research is needed to develop standardized and harmonized methods of processing device-based measures of physical activity and sedentary behaviour. | |
| 2. Randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies that use device-based measures are needed to elucidate the causal and independent dose-response associations between physical activity or sedentary behaviour and health outcomes. | |
| 3. Work is needed to better address whether the associations between physical activity or sedentary behaviour and health outcomes vary by type or domain of physical activity or sedentary behaviour. | |
| 4. More work needs to examine the interactive effects of physical activity and sedentary behaviour on health outcomes. It is possible that higher levels of physical activity may be needed among youth who spend large amounts of time in sedentary behaviours. | |
| 5. Studies that examine the effects of newer forms of sedentary behaviour (e.g., smartphones, tablets) on various health outcomes are needed as well as studies that try to determine the role of interruptions or breaks in sedentary behaviour (e.g., quantifying the optimal combination of frequency, intensity and duration of interruptions). | |
| 6. Future studies should include a broader range of outcomes when examining the association between physical activity or sedentary behaviour and health (e.g., mental health, cognition, academic achievement, quality of life, motor skill development, and musculoskeletal outcomes such as spine/neck problems associated with screen use). | |
| 7. Future studies will need to conduct subgroup analyses to determine whether the patterns of association between physical activity or sedentary behaviour and health outcomes vary by age, sex, race/ethnicity, socioeconomic status and/or weight status. This knowledge gap substantially limits the ability to determine whether guideline recommendations should be applied broadly to the population or adapted to specific subgroups. |