Abstract

2016 has been an exciting year for research in physical activity, inactivity and health. Recognition of the importance of all physical behaviors (physical activity, sedentary time and sleep) across the 24-hr day continues to grow. Notable advances have included: applications of recent methodological innovations that account for the codependence of the behaviors in the finite 24-hr period showing that the balance of these behaviors is associated with health; methodological innovations focusing on the classification of behaviors and/or quantification of the 24-hr diurnal activity pattern; and a series of systematic reviews that helped provide the evidence base for the release of the innovative 24-hr movement guidelines earlier this year. This commentary focuses on just two of these papers: the first by Goldsmith and colleagues who demonstrate a new statistical method that exploits the time series nature of accelerometer data facilitating new insights into time-specific determinants of children's activity patterns and associations with health; the second by Tremblay and colleagues who describe the evidence base for associations between each physical behavior and children's health, the emerging evidence base for associations between the balance of behaviors and health, and development of the world's first 24-hr movement guidelines.

Highlights

  • To determine the relationships between moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), vigorous physical activity (VPA), sedentary time, and obesity in children from 12 countries representing a wide range of human development

  • Commentary: 2015 saw the release of a number of papers reporting findings from the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE). This ambitious multi-national crosssectional study recruited over 6000 children, aged about ten, from 12 countries spread across five major regions of the world (Europe, Africa, the Americas, South-East Asia and the Western Pacific)

  • TV viewing tends to have stronger associations with obesity than total sedentary time, leading the authors to suggest that TV viewing may be more prominent in these five countries contributing to the stronger associations found

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Summary

Introduction

To determine the relationships between moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), vigorous physical activity (VPA), sedentary time, and obesity in children from 12 countries representing a wide range of human development. Moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and vigorous physical activity (VPA) were consistently negatively associated with obesity, independently of sedentary time, across the whole multinational sample and at each site individually. The relationship between obesity and sedentary time was less robust; while significant for the whole sample it was not independent of MVPA and was less consistent, being significant in only 5 of the 12 sites (Australia, Canada, Columbia, South Africa and the US).

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