International comparison of the levels and potential correlates of objectively measured sedentary time and physical activity among three-to-four-year-old children

Kaiseree Dias*, James White, Russ Jago, Greet Cardon , Rachel Davey , Kathleen Janz , Russell Pate , Jardena Puder , John Reilly , Ruth Kipping

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)
471 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Physical activity (PA) patterns track from childhood through to adulthood. The study aimed to determine the levels and correlates of sedentary time (ST), total PA (TPA), and moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) in preschool-aged children. We conducted cross-sectional analyses of 1052 children aged three-to-four-years-old from six studies included in the International Children’s Accelerometry Database. Multilevel linear regression models adjusting for age, gender, season, minutes of wear time, and study clustering effects were used to estimate associations between age, gender, country, season, ethnicity, parental education, day of the week, time of sunrise, time of sunset, and hours of daylight and the daily minutes spent in ST, TPA, and MVPA. Across the UK, Switzerland, Belgium, and the USA, children in our analysis sample spent 490 min in ST per day and 30.0% and 21.2% of children did not engage in recommended daily TPA (≥180 min) and MVPA (≥60 min) guidelines. There was evidence for an association between all 10 potential correlates analyzed and at least one of the outcome variables; average daily minutes spent in ST, TPA and/or MVPA. These correlates can inform the design of public health interventions internationally to decrease ST and increase PA in preschoolers
Original languageEnglish
Article number1929
Number of pages16
JournalInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Volume16
Issue number11
Early online date31 May 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2019

Research Groups and Themes

  • DECIPHer

Keywords

  • child
  • preschool
  • accelerometry
  • physical activity
  • sedentary behaviour
  • cross-sectional studies
  • ICAD

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