AI Article Synopsis

  • - The HEIA cohort study tracked 908 children from ages 11 to 13 to explore the links between screen time, diet, and physical activity.
  • - Results indicated that increased screen time correlates with higher consumption of sugary drinks and unhealthy snacks, while negatively impacting fruit and vegetable intake, but showed weak ties with leisure-time physical activity.
  • - The study concludes that there is a need for further intervention research, as screen time and physical activity appear to be independent behaviors and should be treated separately in health promotions.

Article Abstract

Background: There is a need for more longitudinal studies investigating the associations between screen-based sedentary behaviors (SB), dietary behaviors and leisure-time physical activity (PA).

Methods: In the HEIA cohort study, 908 children were followed from age 11 to age 13 (September 2007-May 2009). The children self-reported their intake of fruits, vegetables, soft drinks with sugar and snacks. TV/DVD use, computer/game use and leisure-time PA were also self-reported. Multilevel generalized linear mixed model analysis was used to assess longitudinal associations between the screen-based SB and each of the two other behaviors.

Results: Twenty-month changes in TV/DVD use and computer/game use were positively associated with changes in the consumption of soft drinks with sugar and unhealthy snacks in the same period; and inversely associated with change in vegetable consumption. Change in computer/game use was also inversely related to change in fruit consumption. An inverse but non-substantive association was found between change in TV/DVD use and change in leisure-time PA. Change in computer/game use was not significantly associated with change in leisure-time PA.

Conclusions: Changes in screen-based SB were associated with multiple unfavorable changes in dietary habits, although the associations were weak. These associations need to be further investigated in intervention/experimental studies, to assess whether changing screen-based SB will result in clinically relevant changes in dietary behaviors. However, the findings of this study suggest that screen-based SB and leisure-time PA are largely independent behaviors which should be addressed separately in health promotion activities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3560151PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-10-9DOI Listing

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