Department of Exercise Science, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, 921 Assembly Street, Room 131, Columbia SC 29208, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2010 Feb;38(2):208-16. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2009.09.045.
Insufficient physical activity among young people aged 5-18 years is a global public health issue, with considerable disparities among countries. A systematic review was conducted to identify studies reporting pedometer daily steps (steps x day(-1)) in order to compile comparative, global cross-sectional data on youth physical activity patterns.
Articles were included if they were in English, published by April 2009, and reported steps x day(-1) for boys and girls, separately, and reported steps x day(-1) for age groupings of no more than 4 years (e.g., 5-8 years) or combined no more than three grade levels (e.g., third- to fifth-graders). Studies could have been intervention-based but had to have reported baseline steps x day(-1), which would reflect unadulterated physical activity steps x day(-1) estimates. Inverse variance weighted estimates (steps x day(-1w)) were calculated for each country, and random effects models were estimated. Analyses were conducted in May and June 2009.
Forty-three studies, representing young people in 13 countries (N=14,200), were included. The majority of studies were from the U.S. (17/43). Overall, there was considerable variation within and among countries in steps x day(-1w). Boys and girls from European and Western Pacific regions had significantly more steps x day(-1w) than young people from the U.S. and Canada. Significantly lower steps x day(-1w) estimates for girls were observed for studies that combined measured steps x day(-1) for weekdays and weekend days, in comparison to weekdays only.
Limited sample sizes and non-population-based data preclude definitive statements regarding projected steps x day(-1) within countries. Nevertheless, these findings provide preliminary information for policymakers and researchers on the extent of the disparities among countries in the physical activity patterns of young people.
5-18 岁青少年体力活动不足是一个全球性公共卫生问题,各国之间存在相当大的差异。本研究旨在识别报告计步器每日步数(steps x day(-1))的研究,以汇编全球青少年体力活动模式的比较性横断面数据。
如果文章为英文,发表于 2009 年 4 月之前,且分别报告了男孩和女孩的每日步数(steps x day(-1)),并且按不超过 4 岁的年龄分组(例如,5-8 岁)或不超过三个年级水平(例如,三至五年级)报告了每日步数(steps x day(-1)),则将其纳入研究。研究可以是基于干预的,但必须报告每日步数(steps x day(-1))的基线值,这将反映未经篡改的体力活动每日步数(steps x day(-1))估计值。为每个国家计算了反向方差加权估计值(steps x day(-1w)),并进行了随机效应模型估计。分析于 2009 年 5 月和 6 月进行。
共有 43 项研究代表了来自 13 个国家(N=14200)的年轻人,其中大多数研究来自美国(17/43)。总体而言,每日步数(steps x day(-1w))在国家内部和国家之间存在相当大的差异。来自欧洲和西太平洋地区的男孩和女孩的每日步数(steps x day(-1w))明显多于来自美国和加拿大的年轻人。与仅工作日相比,将工作日和周末的测量每日步数(steps x day(-1))合并的研究中,女孩的每日步数(steps x day(-1w))估计值显著较低。
样本量有限且数据非基于人群,因此无法对各国的预测每日步数(steps x day(-1))做出明确的结论。尽管如此,这些研究结果为政策制定者和研究人员提供了有关各国之间青少年体力活动模式差异程度的初步信息。