Wardle J, Brodersen N H, Boniface D
Cancer Research UK Health Behaviour Unit, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK. j.wardle@ucl
Int J Obes (Lond). 2007 Sep;31(9):1464-8. doi: 10.1038/sj.ijo.0803651. Epub 2007 May 22.
School-based physical education (PE) is often proposed as a strategy for obesity prevention, but many trials have found non-significant effects on body mass index (BMI). We examined the impact of school PE on adiposity in adolescents, using an ecological analysis to relate the number of PE sessions to changes in BMI and waist circumference.
Five-year, longitudinal, school-based study involving 34 secondary schools in London, England. Students were aged 11-12 years at baseline. Twenty-five schools reported one weekly session of PE, seven schools reported two sessions and two boys' schools reported three sessions. Weights, heights and waist circumferences were measured annually, and complete data from the first and fifth years of the study were available on 2727 students. Analyses compared anthropometric changes between students in schools with higher or lower amounts of PE time. In boys, the comparisons were between those receiving 1, 2 or 3 weekly sessions. In girls, comparisons were between those receiving one and two sessions.
There were no differences in BMI changes or the percentage of students classified as obese between schools of higher and lower frequency of PE. However, using unadjusted data, there were lower gains in waist circumference in boys and girls from the higher PE schools. Controlling for baseline demographic and anthropometric characteristics, boys in schools providing 3 weekly PE sessions gained on average approximately 3 cm less than boys in schools providing one or two sessions (P<0.001). Differences in girls were in the same direction but not significant.
Higher levels of school PE were associated with lower gains in adiposity in boys. This strengthens the case for including recommendations on school PE time as part of population strategies to control adolescent obesity.
以学校为基础的体育教育(PE)常被视为预防肥胖的一项策略,但许多试验发现其对体重指数(BMI)并无显著影响。我们通过生态分析,研究学校体育教育对青少年肥胖的影响,将体育课节数与BMI及腰围变化联系起来。
一项为期五年的纵向研究,涉及英国伦敦的34所中学。学生基线年龄为11至12岁。25所学校报告每周有一节体育课,7所学校报告每周有两节,两所男子学校报告每周有三节。每年测量体重、身高和腰围,研究第一年和第五年的完整数据来自2727名学生。分析比较了体育课时数较多或较少的学校学生的人体测量变化。对于男生,比较的是每周上1、2或3节课的学生。对于女生,比较的是每周上1节和2节课的学生。
体育课时数较多和较少的学校,学生的BMI变化或被归类为肥胖的学生比例没有差异。然而,在未调整的数据中,体育课时数较多的学校的男生和女生腰围增加较少。在控制了基线人口统计学和人体测量学特征后,每周提供3节体育课的学校的男生平均腰围比提供1节或2节体育课的学校的男生少增加约3厘米(P<0.001)。女生的差异方向相同但不显著。
学校体育教育水平较高与男生肥胖增加较少有关。这进一步证明了将关于学校体育课时数的建议纳入控制青少年肥胖的人群策略的合理性。