2018
DOI: 10.1111/ijpo.12265
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Cross‐sectional and prospective associations of meeting 24‐h movement guidelines with overweight and obesity in preschool children

Abstract: In contrast to previous cross-sectional studies, neither individual movement behaviours nor combinations of behaviours at age 4 years was associated with overweight or obesity, BMI or BMI z-score at age 4 or 5 years. More prospective data are needed before effects on weight status from meeting the 24-h movement guidelines are elucidated.

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Cited by 32 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with findings in young children in the high-income countries [23,24,26,44], we did not find associations between adiposity and not meeting the physical activity or sleep guideline or specific combinations of two guidelines or all three guidelines. However, caution should be taken in interpreting these findings as evidence of no associations between meeting movement behaviour guidelines and adiposity.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…Consistent with findings in young children in the high-income countries [23,24,26,44], we did not find associations between adiposity and not meeting the physical activity or sleep guideline or specific combinations of two guidelines or all three guidelines. However, caution should be taken in interpreting these findings as evidence of no associations between meeting movement behaviour guidelines and adiposity.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…This is supported by evidence in children and adolescences, which suggests that excessive screen media exposure is associated with increased eating while viewing screens as well as reduced sleep duration; and these, in turn, could lead to higher adiposity [43]. However, our result did not align with findings in high-income countries, which suggest no associations between screen guidelines compliance and adiposity in preschool-aged children and toddlers [23,24,26,44]. One reason for this could be the ethical or cultural difference.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 61%
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“…Of concern, few youth with VIs in this study (5.8%) adhered to all three 24-hr movement guidelines. This figure appears lower than estimates of proportions of youth without disabilities in prior research, which can range from 7.2% (Roman-Vinas et al, 2016) to 18.4% (Berglind et al, 2018). As such, most youth with VIs in this study (94.2%) did not meet all three of the 24-hr movement guidelines and therefore did not take advantage of the collective, integrative physiological (e.g., favourable body mass index) and psychological (e.g., reductions in symptoms of anxiety and depression) benefits of meeting each of these guidelines Zhu et al, 2019).…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 76%
“…PA guidelines target just a fraction of each 24 hr and do not account for other modifiable lifestyle behaviours, such as sleep duration (SD) and screen time, which are also predictive of health-related outcomes (Berglind, Ljung, Tynelius, & Brooke, 2018;Carson, Chaput, Janssen, & Tremblay, 2016;Tremblay et al, 2016). Reflecting the emerging belief that "the whole day matters," recent years have seen the development and adoption of movement behaviour guidelines across the entire 24-hr period (Chastin, Palarea-Albaladejo, Dontje, & Skelton, 2015;Tremblay et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%