Device-measured physical activity and adiposity in schoolchildren: a 30-week follow-up study

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Objectives To examine the device-measured physical activity patterns during the complete week, weekdays, and weekends over 30 weeks in schoolchildren, and to assess the association of physical activity patterns and adherence to daily steps recommendations with adiposity parameters (body mass index [BMI], body fat percentage [BF%], and waist circumference). Methods We conducted a follow-up study involving 338 children (55% girls, mean age 11.0 years) from six public primary schools in Cuenca, Spain. Daily steps were measured using Xiaomi Mi Band 3 Smartwatch over 30 weeks. BMI, BF%, and waist circumference were assessed in the final week of follow-up. Analysis of covariance models and restricted cubic splines examined the dose-response relationship between daily steps (complete week, weekdays, and weekends) and adiposity parameters. Multivariate mixed-effect linear analyses examined the associations of 1,000 steps/day increment and adiposity parameters. Results Children averaged 861 more steps/day on weekdays compared to weekends. We observed an inverse association between daily steps and adiposity parameters, particularly in those who achieved more than 12,000 steps/day and met the daily step recommendations > 40% of the days (p < 0.05), although this was only found in boys. An increase of 1,000 steps/day on weekdays was associated with reductions in BMI, BF%, and waist circumference (unstandardised β coefficients were − 0.17, -0.36, and − 0.59, respectively; p < 0.05). Sensitivity analyses confirmed that longer monitoring periods provided stronger associations between physical activity and adiposity parameters. Conclusion Higher levels of daily steps, especially on weekdays, were associated with lower adiposity in childhood.

Article activity feed