Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group, CHEO Research Institute, 401 Smyth Road, Ottawa, ON, K1H 8L1, Canada.
Faculty of Medicine, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Canada.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2019 Oct 28;16(1):94. doi: 10.1186/s12966-019-0861-y.
Insufficient physical activity, short sleep duration, and excessive recreational screen time are increasing globally. Currently, there are little to no data describing prevalences and correlates of movement behaviours among children in low-middle-income countries. The few available reports do not include both urban and rural respondents, despite the large proportion of rural populations in low-middle-income countries. We compared the prevalence of meeting 24-h movement guidelines and examined correlates of meeting the guidelines in a sample of urban and rural Mozambican schoolchildren.
This is cross-sectional study of 9-11 year-old children (n = 683) recruited from 10 urban and 7 rural schools in Mozambique. Moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA) and sleep duration were measured by waist-worn Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometers. Accelerometers were worn 24 h/day for up to 8 days. Recreational screen time was self-reported. Potential correlates of meeting 24-h movement guidelines were directly measured or obtained from validated items of context-adapted questionnaires. Multilevel multivariable logit models were used to determine the correlates of movement behaviours. Meeting 24-h movement guidelines was defined as ≥60 min/day of MVPA, ≤2 h/day of recreational screen time, and between 9 and 11 h/night of sleep.
More rural (17.7%) than urban (3.6%) children met all three 24-h movement guidelines. Mean MVPA was lower (82.9 ± 29.5 min/day) among urban than rural children (96.7 ± 31.8 min/day). Rural children had longer sleep duration (8.9 ± 0.7 h/night) and shorter recreational screen time (2.7 ± 1.9 h/day) than their urban counterparts (8.7 ± 0.9 h/night and 5.0 ± 2.3 h/day respectively). Parental education (OR: 0.37; CI: 0.16-0.87), school location (OR: 0.21; CI: 0.09-0.52), and outdoor time (OR: 0.67; CI: 0.53-0.85) were significant correlates of meeting all three 24-h movement guidelines.
Prevalence and correlates of meeting movement guidelines differed between urban and rural schoolchildren in Mozambique. On average, both groups had higher daily MVPA minutes, shorter sleep duration, and higher recreational screen time than the 24-h movement guidelines recommend. These findings (e.g., higher than recommended mean daily MVPA minutes) differ from those from high-income countries and highlight the need to sample from both urban and rural areas.
在全球范围内,体力活动不足、睡眠时间短和娱乐性屏幕时间过长的情况日益严重。目前,几乎没有数据描述中低收入国家儿童的运动行为的流行程度和相关因素。少数可用的报告没有包括城市和农村的受访者,尽管中低收入国家的农村人口比例很大。我们比较了城市和农村莫桑比克学童达到 24 小时运动指南的比例,并研究了在该样本中达到该指南的相关因素。
这是一项横断面研究,纳入了来自莫桑比克 10 所城市和 7 所农村学校的 9-11 岁儿童(n=683)。使用佩戴在腰部的 Actigraph GT3X+加速度计测量中等到剧烈强度的身体活动(MVPA)和睡眠时间。加速度计每天佩戴 24 小时,最长可达 8 天。娱乐性屏幕时间由自我报告。达到 24 小时运动指南的潜在相关因素是直接测量的,或从经过验证的适应环境的问卷项目中获得的。使用多级多变量逻辑回归模型确定运动行为的相关因素。达到 24 小时运动指南定义为每天≥60 分钟的 MVPA、每天≤2 小时的娱乐性屏幕时间以及每晚 9-11 小时的睡眠时间。
与城市儿童(3.6%)相比,更多的农村(17.7%)儿童满足所有三个 24 小时运动指南。城市儿童的平均 MVPA 较低(82.9±29.5 分钟/天),而农村儿童的平均 MVPA 较高(96.7±31.8 分钟/天)。农村儿童的睡眠时间较长(8.9±0.7 小时/夜),娱乐性屏幕时间较短(2.7±1.9 小时/天),而城市儿童的睡眠时间较短(8.7±0.9 小时/夜),娱乐性屏幕时间较短(5.0±2.3 小时/天)。父母教育程度(OR:0.37;CI:0.16-0.87)、学校位置(OR:0.21;CI:0.09-0.52)和户外活动时间(OR:0.67;CI:0.53-0.85)是满足所有三个 24 小时运动指南的显著相关因素。
莫桑比克城市和农村学童达到运动指南的比例和相关因素存在差异。平均而言,两组的每日 MVPA 分钟数、睡眠时间和娱乐性屏幕时间都高于 24 小时运动指南推荐的水平。这些发现(例如,高于推荐的每日平均 MVPA 分钟数)与高收入国家的发现不同,突出表明需要同时从城市和农村地区进行抽样。