Age-related patterns of vigorous-intensity physical activity in youth: The International Children's Accelerometry Database.

Details

Ressource 1Download: BIB_2E0848BEC340.P001.pdf (304.43 [Ko])
State: Public
Version: author
Serval ID
serval:BIB_2E0848BEC340
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Age-related patterns of vigorous-intensity physical activity in youth: The International Children's Accelerometry Database.
Journal
Preventive Medicine Reports
Author(s)
Corder K., Sharp S.J., Atkin A.J., Andersen L.B., Cardon G., Page A., Davey R., Grøntved A., Hallal P.C., Janz K.F., Kordas K., Kriemler S., Puder J.J., Sardinha L.B., Ekelund U., van Sluijs E.M.
Working group(s)
International Children's Accelerometry Database (ICAD) Collaborators
ISSN
2211-3355 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
2211-3355
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2016
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
4
Pages
17-22
Language
english
Abstract
Physical activity declines during youth but most evidence reports on combined moderate and vigorous-intensity physical activity. We investigated how vigorous-intensity activity varies with age. Cross-sectional data from 24,025 participants (5.0-18.0 y; from 20 studies in 10 countries obtained 2008-2010) providing ≥ 1 day accelerometer data (International Children's Accelerometry Database (ICAD)). Linear regression was used to investigate age-related patterns in vigorous-intensity activity; models included age (exposure), adjustments for monitor wear-time and study. Moderate-intensity activity was examined for comparison. Interactions were used to investigate whether the age/vigorous-activity association differed by sex, weight status, ethnicity, maternal education and region. A 6.9% (95% CI 6.2, 7.5) relative reduction in mean vigorous-intensity activity with every year of age was observed; for moderate activity the relative reduction was 6.0% (5.6%, 6.4%). The age-related decrease in vigorous-intensity activity remained after adjustment for moderate activity. A larger age-related decrease in vigorous activity was observed for girls (- 10.7%) versus boys (- 2.9%), non-white (- 12.9% to - 9.4%) versus white individuals (- 6.1%), lowest maternal education (high school (- 2.0%)) versus college/university (ns) and for overweight/obese (- 6.1%) versus healthy-weight participants (- 8.1%). In addition to larger annual decreases in vigorous-intensity activity, overweight/obese individuals, girls and North Americans had comparatively lower average vigorous-intensity activity at 5.0-5.9 y. Age-related declines in vigorous-intensity activity during youth appear relatively greater than those of moderate activity. However, due to a higher baseline, absolute moderate-intensity activity decreases more than vigorous. Overweight/obese individuals, girls, and North Americans appear especially in need of vigorous-intensity activity promotion due to low levels at 5.0-5.9 y and larger negative annual differences.
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
25/07/2016 16:48
Last modification date
20/08/2019 13:12
Usage data