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WHO European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative: health-risk behaviours on nutrition and physical activity in 6-9-year-old schoolchildren
TM. Wijnhoven, JM. van Raaij, A. Yngve, A. Sjöberg, M. Kunešová, V. Duleva, A. Petrauskiene, AI. Rito, J. Breda,
Language English Country England, Great Britain
Document type Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Grant support
NT13735
MZ0
CEP Register
Digital library NLK
Full text - Article
Source
NLK
Free Medical Journals
from 1998 to 1 year ago
PubMed Central
from 2012
ProQuest Central
from 2001-02-01 to 1 year ago
Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
from 2001-02-01 to 1 year ago
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2001-02-01 to 1 year ago
Public Health Database (ProQuest)
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ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
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- MeSH
- Patient Compliance * MeSH
- Child Behavior * MeSH
- Diet adverse effects MeSH
- Child MeSH
- Epidemiological Monitoring MeSH
- Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena * MeSH
- Body Mass Index MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Pediatric Obesity epidemiology etiology prevention & control MeSH
- Health Promotion * MeSH
- Motor Activity * MeSH
- Prevalence MeSH
- Cross-Sectional Studies MeSH
- Risk MeSH
- Parents MeSH
- Sedentary Behavior MeSH
- Breakfast MeSH
- World Health Organization MeSH
- Nutrition Surveys MeSH
- Check Tag
- Child MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Female MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Geographicals
- Europe MeSH
OBJECTIVE: To assess to what extent eight behavioural health risks related to breakfast and food consumption and five behavioural health risks related to physical activity, screen time and sleep duration are present among schoolchildren, and to examine whether health-risk behaviours are associated with obesity. DESIGN: Cross-sectional design as part of the WHO European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative (school year 2007/2008). Children's behavioural data were reported by their parents and children's weight and height measured by trained fieldworkers. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were performed. SETTING: Primary schools in Bulgaria, Lithuania, Portugal and Sweden; paediatric clinics in the Czech Republic. SUBJECTS: Nationally representative samples of 6-9-year-olds (n 15 643). RESULTS: All thirteen risk behaviours differed statistically significantly across countries. Highest prevalence estimates of risk behaviours were observed in Bulgaria and lowest in Sweden. Not having breakfast daily and spending screen time ≥2 h/d were clearly positively associated with obesity. The same was true for eating 'foods like pizza, French fries, hamburgers, sausages or meat pies' >3 d/week and playing outside <1 h/d. Surprisingly, other individual unhealthy eating or less favourable physical activity behaviours showed either no or significant negative associations with obesity. A combination of multiple less favourable physical activity behaviours showed positive associations with obesity, whereas multiple unhealthy eating behaviours combined did not lead to higher odds of obesity. CONCLUSIONS: Despite a categorization based on international health recommendations, individual associations of the thirteen health-risk behaviours with obesity were not consistent, whereas presence of multiple physical activity-related risk behaviours was clearly associated with higher odds of obesity.
Department of Food and Nutrition and Sport Science University of Gothenburg Gothenburg Sweden
Department of Food and Nutrition National Center of Public Health and Analyses Sofia Bulgaria
Department of Preventive Medicine Lithuanian University of Health Sciences Kaunas Lithuania
National Health Institute Doutor Ricardo Jorge Lisbon Portugal
Obesity Management Centre Institute of Endocrinology Prague Czech Republic
School of Hospitality Culinary Arts and Meal Science Örebro University Grythyttan Sweden
References provided by Crossref.org
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- $a Wijnhoven, Trudy M A $u 1Division of Noncommunicable Diseases and Promoting Health through the Life-Course,WHO Regional Office for Europe,UN City,Marmorvej 51,DK-2100 Copenhagen Ø,Denmark.
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