Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam University Medical Center, Amsterdam UMC, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2021 Jan 7;18(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s12966-020-01072-w.
Early childhood is a critical period for growth and development, yet the association with physical activity during this important period is unknown. The aim of this review is to critically summarize the evidence on the prospective associations between physical activity and health and development in children aged < 5 years.
A systematic search in three electronic databases (Pubmed, PsycINFO, and Sportdiscus) was conducted to identify prospective studies examining the associations between physical activity (all types; specified by quantity) and health indicators (body composition, cardiometabolic health, bone health and risks/harm) or development (motor, cognitive and social-emotional development) in young children (mean age < 5 years at baseline). Two independent researchers assessed the methodological quality using the 'Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies' (EPHPP). This tool covers eight quality criteria: selection bias, study design, confounders, blinding, data collection methods, withdrawals and drop-outs, intervention integrity and data-analysis.
Thirty-nine studies, predominantly conducted in preschoolers (ages 3-5 years), were included of which nine were rated as high methodological quality. There was moderate evidence for a positive association between physical activity and motor (n = 11 studies) and cognitive development (n = 10 studies) based on consistent findings from studies having low-to-moderate methodological quality. There was insufficient evidence for an association between physical activity and body composition (n = 15 studies), cardiometabolic health indicators (n = 7 studies), social-emotional development (n = 2 studies) and bone health (n = 2 studies) based on inconsistent findings from studies having weak-to-high methodological quality.
There is a need for more high-quality research in order to determine the dose-response relationship between physical activity and health and development in early childhood. Special attention should be paid to studies in children below the age of 3 years.
儿童早期是生长和发育的关键时期,但在此重要时期内身体活动与健康的关联尚不清楚。本综述的目的是批判性地总结关于<5 岁儿童身体活动与健康和发育之间前瞻性关联的证据。
在三个电子数据库(Pubmed、PsycINFO 和 Sportdiscus)中进行系统检索,以确定前瞻性研究,这些研究检查了身体活动(所有类型;按数量指定)与健康指标(身体成分、心血管代谢健康、骨骼健康和风险/危害)或幼儿(基线时平均年龄<5 岁)发育(运动、认知和社会情感发育)之间的关联。两位独立研究人员使用“定量研究质量评估工具”(EPHPP)评估方法学质量。该工具涵盖八项质量标准:选择偏倚、研究设计、混杂因素、盲法、数据收集方法、退出和辍学、干预完整性和数据分析。
共纳入 39 项研究,主要在学龄前儿童(3-5 岁)中进行,其中 9 项研究被评为高质量。基于低至中等质量研究的一致发现,有中度证据表明身体活动与运动(n=11 项研究)和认知发育(n=10 项研究)之间存在正相关。基于低至高质量研究的不一致发现,身体活动与身体成分(n=15 项研究)、心血管代谢健康指标(n=7 项研究)、社会情感发育(n=2 项研究)和骨骼健康(n=2 项研究)之间的关联证据不足。
需要更多高质量的研究来确定身体活动与儿童早期健康和发育之间的剂量反应关系。应特别关注 3 岁以下儿童的研究。