Abstract
BackgroundIt has been proposed that introducing daylight saving measures could increase children’s physical activity, but there exists little research on this issue. This study therefore examined associations between time of sunset and activity levels, including using the bi-annual ‘changing of the clocks’ as a natural experiment.Methods23,188 children aged 5–16 years from 15 studies in nine countries were brought together in the International Children’s Accelerometry Database. 439 of these children were of particular interest for our analyses as they contributed data both immediately before and after the clocks changed. All children provided objectively-measured physical activity data from Actigraph accelerometers, and we used their average physical activity level (accelerometer counts per minute) as our primary outcome. Date of accelerometer data collection was matched to time of sunset, and to weather characteristics including daily precipitation, humidity, wind speed and temperature.ResultsAdjusting for child and weather covariates, we found that longer evening daylight was independently associated with a small increase in daily physical activity. Consistent with a causal interpretation, the magnitude of these associations was largest in the late afternoon and early evening and these associations were also evident when comparing the same child just before and just after the clocks changed. These associations were, however, only consistently observed in the five mainland European, four English and two Australian samples (adjusted, pooled effect sizes 0.03-0.07 standard deviations per hour of additional evening daylight). In some settings there was some evidence of larger associations between daylength and physical activity in boys. There was no evidence of interactions with weight status or maternal education, and inconsistent findings for interactions with age.ConclusionsIn Europe and Australia, evening daylight seems to play a causal role in increasing children’s activity in a relatively equitable manner. Although the average increase in activity is small in absolute terms, these increases apply across all children in a population. Moreover, these small effect sizes actually compare relatively favourably with the typical effect of intensive, individual-level interventions. We therefore conclude that, by shifting the physical activity mean of the entire population, the introduction of additional daylight saving measures could yield worthwhile public health benefits.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/1479-5868-11-84) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
It has been proposed that introducing daylight saving measures could increase children’s physical activity, but there exists little research on this issue
Evening daylight and overall activity levels A later hour of sunset was associated with increased daily activity across the full range of time of sunset, and this association was only partly attenuated after adjusting for the six weather covariates (Figure 1)
Among 23,000 school-age children from 9 countries, we found strong evidence that longer evening daylight was associated with a small increase in daily physical activity, even after adjusting for weather conditions
Summary
It has been proposed that introducing daylight saving measures could increase children’s physical activity, but there exists little research on this issue. For children as for adults, successfully promoting physical activity is likely to require both individual-level and population-level interventions [7] The latter are important because, following the insights of Geoffrey Rose [8], even a small shift in a population mean can yield important public health benefits. A Bill was debated in the British Parliament between 2010 and 2012 which proposed to shift the clocks forward by an additional hour year round. This change would have given British children an estimated average of 200 extra waking daylight hours per year [10], and the logo of the associated civil society campaign depicted children playing outdoors in the evening sunlight. A similar argument about leisure-time activity has featured in the Australian debate [12]
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More From: International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity
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