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Daily School Physical Activity Is Associated with Higher Level of Physical Activity Independently of Other Socioecological Factors

Lahti, Amanda LU ; Rosengren, Björn LU ; Nilsson, Jan Åke LU ; Dencker, Magnus LU and Karlsson, Magnus LU (2020) In Sports 8(8).
Abstract

Only one fifth of children aged 11–17 years are physically active for 60 min (min)/day. As physical activity (PA) levels track from childhood to adulthood, it is important to establish healthy PA behavior early in life. This study aims to evaluate whether daily school PA is associated with objectively measured PA independently of other socioecological factors. This study includes 209 children (120 boys) aged 9.8 ± 0.6 (mean ± SD) years from four government-funded schools in Sweden. One school including 113 children (70 boys) had 40 min of daily school PA (intervention) and three schools including 96 children (50 boys) had 60 min of school PA/week (control). PA was measured during four serial days with accelerometers. General PA (GPA)... (More)

Only one fifth of children aged 11–17 years are physically active for 60 min (min)/day. As physical activity (PA) levels track from childhood to adulthood, it is important to establish healthy PA behavior early in life. This study aims to evaluate whether daily school PA is associated with objectively measured PA independently of other socioecological factors. This study includes 209 children (120 boys) aged 9.8 ± 0.6 (mean ± SD) years from four government-funded schools in Sweden. One school including 113 children (70 boys) had 40 min of daily school PA (intervention) and three schools including 96 children (50 boys) had 60 min of school PA/week (control). PA was measured during four serial days with accelerometers. General PA (GPA) was defined as mean counts per minute (cpm). Socioecological factors were collected by questionnaires, and anthropometric traits by measurements. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to test whether sex, age, relative age, body height, fat mass, lean mass, screen time activity, parental educational level, parental attitude towards PA, parental PA, sibling(s)’ PA, living in a house or apartment, and whether the child was allocated to 40 min daily school PA or 60 min school PA/week, was independently associated with GPA. Daily GPA was found to be 686.9 ± 211.9 cpm. Independently of the other included factors, daily school PA was associated with +81.8 (15.7, 147.8) cpm compared with 60 min PA/week. This study infers that daily school PA is an appropriate strategy to promote PA in 10-year-old children, independently of different socioecological factors.

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author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
intervention, public health, relative-age effect, school
in
Sports
volume
8
issue
8
pages
12 pages
publisher
MDPI AG
external identifiers
  • scopus:85104026806
  • pmid:32751081
ISSN
2075-4663
DOI
10.3390/sports8080105
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
bfb7707b-af3c-45c9-8714-11e819a4e1ef
date added to LUP
2021-04-23 08:29:13
date last changed
2024-06-16 13:11:03
@article{bfb7707b-af3c-45c9-8714-11e819a4e1ef,
  abstract     = {{<p>Only one fifth of children aged 11–17 years are physically active for 60 min (min)/day. As physical activity (PA) levels track from childhood to adulthood, it is important to establish healthy PA behavior early in life. This study aims to evaluate whether daily school PA is associated with objectively measured PA independently of other socioecological factors. This study includes 209 children (120 boys) aged 9.8 ± 0.6 (mean ± SD) years from four government-funded schools in Sweden. One school including 113 children (70 boys) had 40 min of daily school PA (intervention) and three schools including 96 children (50 boys) had 60 min of school PA/week (control). PA was measured during four serial days with accelerometers. General PA (GPA) was defined as mean counts per minute (cpm). Socioecological factors were collected by questionnaires, and anthropometric traits by measurements. Analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was used to test whether sex, age, relative age, body height, fat mass, lean mass, screen time activity, parental educational level, parental attitude towards PA, parental PA, sibling(s)’ PA, living in a house or apartment, and whether the child was allocated to 40 min daily school PA or 60 min school PA/week, was independently associated with GPA. Daily GPA was found to be 686.9 ± 211.9 cpm. Independently of the other included factors, daily school PA was associated with +81.8 (15.7, 147.8) cpm compared with 60 min PA/week. This study infers that daily school PA is an appropriate strategy to promote PA in 10-year-old children, independently of different socioecological factors.</p>}},
  author       = {{Lahti, Amanda and Rosengren, Björn and Nilsson, Jan Åke and Dencker, Magnus and Karlsson, Magnus}},
  issn         = {{2075-4663}},
  keywords     = {{intervention; public health; relative-age effect; school}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{8}},
  publisher    = {{MDPI AG}},
  series       = {{Sports}},
  title        = {{Daily School Physical Activity Is Associated with Higher Level of Physical Activity Independently of Other Socioecological Factors}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/sports8080105}},
  doi          = {{10.3390/sports8080105}},
  volume       = {{8}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}