Volume and accumulation patterns of physical activity and sedentary time: longitudinal changes and tracking from early to late childhood

Mar 18, 2021The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity

Changes and patterns of active and inactive time from early to late childhood

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Abstract

Total volume of sedentary time increased, while light-intensity physical activity decreased among children from ages 3 to 11.

  • Boys and girls showed an increase in total volume and bouts of sedentary time, as well as breaks in sedentary time.
  • Total volume and bouts of light-intensity physical activity decreased for both sexes.
  • Girls experienced a small decrease in total volume of moderate-intensity physical activity, but time spent in at least 1-minute bouts increased for both sexes.
  • Total volume of vigorous-intensity physical activity increased for both sexes, with boys showing increased time in at least 1-minute bouts.
  • of volume and pattern variables was moderate for boys, while girls exhibited strong tracking for total sedentary time and weak tracking for longer sedentary bouts.

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Key numbers

48.2 min/day
Increase in Total Sedentary Time
Average change from T1 to T3 in total SED
-26.9 min/day
Decrease in Total Light-Intensity PA
Average change from T1 to T3 in total LPA
0.49
Moderate of Total SED
Standardised coefficient for total SED

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What this is

  • This research investigates changes in physical activity (PA) and sedentary time (SED) patterns from early to late childhood.
  • It examines how total volumes and accumulation patterns of SED, light-intensity PA (LPA), moderate-intensity PA (MPA), and vigorous-intensity PA (VPA) evolve over time.
  • The study utilized accelerometers to objectively measure these behaviors in a cohort of children at three different ages.

Essence

  • SED and PA patterns change from preschool to late primary school, with increases in SED and decreases in LPA. of these behaviors varies by intensity and duration.

Key takeaways

  • Total volumes of SED increased significantly, while total volumes and bouts of LPA decreased for both boys and girls over the study period.
  • of SED and PA patterns was moderate to strong for shorter bouts, but weak for longer bouts, indicating different stability levels across intensities.
  • Interventions should target reducing SED and promoting higher levels of MVPA from an early age to support healthier activity patterns.

Caveats

  • Loss to follow-up may limit the generalizability of findings, as only 75% of participants were retained across the study.
  • The study's initial design as cross-sectional may affect the robustness of longitudinal conclusions.

Definitions

  • Tracking: Stability of a behavior over time, reflecting an individual's relative rank within a cohort.

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