Centre for Exercise, Nutrition and Health Sciences, School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol, 8 Priory Rd, Bristol, BS8 1TZ, UK.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 2PS, UK.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2023 Apr 27;20(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s12966-023-01441-1.
The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in marked impacts on children's physical activity, with large reductions in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) reported during lockdowns. Previous evidence showed children's activity levels were lower and sedentary time higher immediately post-COVID lockdown, while there was little change in parental physical activity. We need to know if these patterns persist.
Active-6 is a natural experiment using repeated cross-sectional data conducted in two waves. Accelerometer data were collected on 393 children aged 10-11 and their parents from 23 schools in Wave 1 (June 2021-December 2021), and 436 children and parents from 27 schools in Wave 2 (January 2022-July 2022). These were compared to a pre-COVID-19 comparator group (March 2017-May 2018) of 1,296 children and parents in the same schools. Mean minutes of accelerometer-measured MVPA and sedentary time were derived for week- and weekend-days and compared across waves via linear multilevel models. We also analysed the date of data collection as a time series, to explore temporal patterns via generalised additive mixed models.
There was no difference in children's mean MVPA in Wave 2 (weekdays: -2.3 min; 95% CI: -5.9, 1.3 and weekends: 0.6 min; 95% CI: -3.5, 4.6) when compared to the pre-COVID-19 data. Sedentary time remained higher than pre-pandemic by 13.2 min (95% CI:5.3, 21.1) on weekdays. Differences compared to pre-COVID-19 changed over time, with children's MVPA decreasing over winter, coinciding with COVID-19 outbreaks, and only returning to pre-pandemic levels towards May/June 2022. Parents' sedentary time and weekday MVPA was similar to pre-COVID-19 levels, with MVPA higher than pre-pandemic by 7.7 min (95% CI: 1.4, 14.0) on weekends.
After an initial drop, children's MVPA returned to pre-pandemic levels by July 2022, while sedentary time remained higher. Parents' MVPA remained higher, especially at weekends. The recovery in physical activity is precarious and potentially susceptible to future COVID-19 outbreaks or changes in provision, and so robust measures to protect against future disruptions are needed. Furthermore, many children are still inactive, with only 41% meeting UK physical activity guidelines, and so there is still a need to increase children's physical activity.
新冠疫情对儿童的身体活动产生了显著影响,封锁期间报告的中度至剧烈身体活动(MVPA)大幅减少。先前的证据表明,新冠疫情封锁后,儿童的活动水平较低,久坐时间较长,而父母的身体活动几乎没有变化。我们需要知道这些模式是否持续存在。
Active-6 是一项使用重复横断面数据进行的自然实验,在两个波次中进行。在第 1 波次(2021 年 6 月至 12 月)中,从 23 所学校的 393 名 10-11 岁儿童及其家长收集加速度计数据,在第 2 波次(2022 年 1 月至 7 月)中,从 27 所学校的 436 名儿童及其家长收集加速度计数据。这些数据与同一学校的 2017 年 3 月至 2018 年 5 月的新冠疫情前对照组(1296 名儿童及其家长)进行了比较。通过线性多层模型,从周内和周末的加速度计测量的 MVPA 和久坐时间的平均值分钟数,并在波次之间进行比较。我们还通过广义加性混合模型分析数据收集日期作为时间序列,以探索时间模式。
与新冠疫情前的数据相比,第 2 波次儿童的平均 MVPA 没有差异(周内:-2.3 分钟;95%CI:-5.9,1.3;周末:0.6 分钟;95%CI:-3.5,4.6)。周末的久坐时间仍然比疫情前高出 13.2 分钟(95%CI:5.3,21.1)。与新冠疫情前相比,差异随时间而变化,儿童的 MVPA 在冬季下降,恰逢新冠疫情爆发,直到 2022 年 5 月/6 月才恢复到疫情前水平。父母的久坐时间和周内 MVPA 与新冠疫情前水平相似,周末的 MVPA 比疫情前高 7.7 分钟(95%CI:1.4,14.0)。
在最初下降后,儿童的 MVPA 在 2022 年 7 月前恢复到疫情前水平,而久坐时间仍然较高。父母的 MVPA 仍然较高,尤其是在周末。身体活动的恢复是不稳定的,可能容易受到未来新冠疫情爆发或供应变化的影响,因此需要采取有力措施来防范未来的干扰。此外,仍有许多儿童不活跃,只有 41%的儿童符合英国身体活动指南,因此仍有必要增加儿童的身体活动。