Health-related parental indicators and their association with healthy weight and overweight/obese children's physical activity
Jazyk angličtina Země Velká Británie, Anglie Médium electronic
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články
Grantová podpora
16-14620S
Grantová Agentura České Republiky - International
PubMed
29855285
PubMed Central
PMC5984306
DOI
10.1186/s12889-018-5582-7
PII: 10.1186/s12889-018-5582-7
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- Klíčová slova
- Organized leisure time physical activity, Overweight and obesity, Preschool and school-aged children, Step counts,
- MeSH
- aktigrafie MeSH
- antropometrie MeSH
- čas strávený před obrazovkou MeSH
- cvičení psychologie MeSH
- dítě MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- obezita dětí a dospívajících psychologie MeSH
- optimální tělesná hmotnost MeSH
- předškolní dítě MeSH
- rodiče psychologie MeSH
- volnočasové aktivity psychologie MeSH
- vztahy mezi rodiči a dětmi * MeSH
- zdravé chování * MeSH
- Check Tag
- dítě MeSH
- lidé MeSH
- mužské pohlaví MeSH
- předškolní dítě MeSH
- ženské pohlaví MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
BACKGROUND: Although it is accepted that parents play a key role in forming children's health behaviours, differences in parent-child physical activity (PA) have not previously been analysed simultaneously in random samples of families with non-overweight and overweight to obese preschool and school-aged children. This study answers the question which of the health-related parental indicators (daily step count (SC), screen time (ST), and weight status and participation in organized leisure-time PA) help their children achieve the step count recommendations. METHODS: A nationally representative sample comprising 834 families including 1564 parent-child dyads who wore the Yamax Digiwalker SW-200 pedometer for at least 8 h a day on at least four weekdays and both weekend days and completed a family log book (anthropometric parameters, SC, and ST). Logistic regression analyses were used to investigate whether parental achievement of the daily SC recommendation (10,000 SC/day), non-excessive ST (< 2 h/day), weight status, and active participation in organized PA were associated with children's achievement of their daily SC (11,500 SC/day for pre-schoolers and 13,000/11,000 SC/day for school-aged boys/girls). RESULTS: While living in a family with non-overweight parents helps children achieve the daily SC recommendation (mothers in the model: OR = 3.50, 95% CI = 2.29-5.34, p < 0.001; fathers in the model: OR = 2.41, 95% CI = 1.37-4.26, p < 0.01) regardless of their age category, gender, or ST, for families with overweight/obese children, only the mother's achievement of the SC recommendations and non-excessive ST significantly (p < 0.05) increase the odds of their children reaching the daily SC recommendation. The active participation of children in organized leisure-time PA increases the odds of all children achieving the daily SC recommendations (OR = 1.80-2.85); however, for overweight/obese children this remains non-significant. The participation of parents in organized leisure-time PA does not have a significant relationship to the odds of their overweight/obese or non-overweight children achieving the daily SC recommendations. CONCLUSIONS: The mother's health-related behaviours (PA and ST) significantly affect the level of PA of overweight/obese preschool and school-aged children. PA enhancement programmes for overweight/obese children cannot rely solely on the active participation of children in organized leisure-time PA; they also need to take other family-based PA, especially at weekends, into account.
Department of Health Psychology Faculty of Physical Culture Safarik University Košice Slovakia
Graduate School Košice Institute for Society and Health Safarik University Košice Slovakia
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