Movement Behaviors in Children and Indicators of Adverse Health

Research output: Book/ReportPh.D. thesisResearch

Abstract

The prevalence of overweight children is high and increasing numbers of children now show features of metabolic syndrome. Various aspects of physical activity, sedentary behavior, and lack of good-quality sleep have all been linked to this recent development of overweight and cardio-metabolic risk among children. Early puberty is a period characterized by rapid changes in body composition and movement behaviors. As movement behaviors, obesity, and cardio-metabolic risk appear to track from childhood to adulthood, this may be a critical period for implementing preventive strategies aimed at reducing obesity and its associated metabolic complications in adulthood.

In my PhD thesis I assessed objectively measured physical activity, sedentary behavior, and sleep in 8- to 11-year-old Danish children and related these movement behaviors to indicators of adverse health (dietary intake, adiposity, and cardio-metabolic risk markers).

Firstly, findings indicated that waist-worn accelerometers could be used to obtain a proxy measure of sleep duration meaning that monitoring of physical activity and sleep could be done by a single accelerometer worn on the waist for 24-hours a day.

Secondly, most of the children did not meet international screen time, physical activity, and sleep recommendations. Physical activity was lower and sedentary time was higher during winter and during weekends and sleep duration was also lowest during weekends indicating that these periods might serve as key intervention periods to promote a healthy lifestyle.

Thirdly, short sleep duration and a high variability in sleep duration, as well as sleep problems, were associated with an obesity-promoting diet. Short sleep duration was also associated with a higher fat mass index and increased cardio-metabolic risk. Furthermore, a decline in physical activity was associated with increased fat mass index and cardio-metabolic risk over a 200-day follow-up period. Results indicated that low physical activity and high sedentary time was the result of fatness rather than its cause. Finally, combined negative levels of physical activity, sedentary behavior and sleep were synergistically associated with higher fat mass index and cardio-metabolic risk.

In summary, these results suggest that multiple movement behaviors should be targeted to improve cardio-metabolic risk markers in childhood and that this is possibly mediated or confounded by adiposity.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationCopenhagen
PublisherDepartment of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, Faculty of Science, University of Copenhagen
Number of pages146
ISBN (Print)978-87-7611-723-8
Publication statusPublished - 2014

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