BOX 2-4 Continued
Figure for Box 2-4.eps
0
1
2
3
4
5
>7
4-7
1-3
<1
Never/Rarely
Hazard
Ratio
Hours/Week of Vigorous- or Moderate-Intensity Physical Activity
<1
1-2
3-4
5-6
7+
Hrs/Day
TV
current recommendation for vigorous- or moderate-intensity physical activ-
ity, nearly the whole day comprises sedentary and light-intensity physical
activities (Treuth et al., 2012).
Various suggestions have been made about what aspects of youth’s
sedentary physical activity should be avoided and monitored, including
limiting television viewing to less than 2 hours per day, limiting television
viewing to less than 3 hours per day, limiting computer use to less than
3 hours per day, and limiting total media time to less than 2 hours per day
(see, e.g., the Healthy People 2020 objectives [HealthyPeople.gov, 2012]).
Not surprisingly, surveys and studies of sedentary behavior among
children and adolescents have used various methods of data collection
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
Status and Trends of Physical Activity Behaviors and Related School Policies
55
2011). Cohort studies among youth that have controlled for vigorous- or
moderate-intensity physical activity have yet to demonstrate a relation-
ship between reductions in sedentary activity (which is the same as
increases in light-intensity activity) and health or risk factor outcomes
(Carson and Janssen, 2011; Ekelund et al., 2012).
The implications of these findings for behavioral recommendations
regarding beneficial physical activity are still under discussion. Sedentary
activities fill about half the waking hours of children and adolescents
(probably relatively less for children and more for adolescents). Sedentary
and light-intensity activities together fill 80-95 percent of waking hours
(see Figure 2-6). More remains to be learned about the differences in
health improvement, academic performance, and classroom behavior
engendered by different intensities of physical activity. It is clear that
the physiologic effects differ for different intensities. Higher-intensity
activities, for example, provide greater cardiovascular fitness and lower
cardiovascular mortality risk at all volumes of sedentary activity. Most
likely, different intensities provide different benefits. The current consen-
sus is that children and adolescents need some vigorous activity daily for
maximum current and future health. Light-intensity physical activity can
now be viewed as a healthy shift away from sedentary physical activity
as well. Higher rates of energy expenditure are preferred over lower rates
across the full range of intensities. The behavioral differences between
sedentary-intensity and vigorous- or moderate-intensity physical activi-
ties are considerable, and interventions to discourage the former and
promote the latter can be expected to be quite different.
(e.g., self-report, accelerometer, proxy), have assessed different aspects of
sedentary-intensity physical activity (e.g., total sedentary time, watching
television for more than 2 or 3 hours), and have reported the data in differ-
ent formats (e.g., percentage meeting a specified requirement, mean minutes
of sedentary physical activity). Taken together, the results of these surveys
and studies indicate that children and adolescents spend a great deal of
time in activities requiring very low energy expenditure. The results also
indicate that girls are more likely than boys and older adolescents are more
likely than children to engage in these low-energy activities, although the
differences are generally smaller than for vigorous- or moderate-intensity
physical activity.
Copyright © National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved.
Educating the Student Body: Taking Physical Activity and Physical Education to School
56
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