chapter 10 children’s health

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Chapter 10 Children’s health

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Chapter 10 Children’s health. Chapter overview. Introduction Physical activity and physical fitness Obesity Type 2 diabetes CVD Bone health Summary. Introduction. The majority of studies are observational. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Chapter 10Children’s health

Page 2: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Chapter overview

• Introduction

• Physical activity and physical fitness

• Obesity

• Type 2 diabetes

• CVD

• Bone health

• Summary

Page 3: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Introduction

• The majority of studies are observational.

• Differences in maturation may confound findings of studies where only chronological age is assessed.

• Outcome measures are invariably risk factors rather than disease endpoints.

• Childhood is considered to be the period before puberty.

• Adolescence is considered to be the period from the beginning of puberty until adulthood.

Page 4: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Physical activity in young people

• Active transport to school has declined.

• Sedentary behaviour is common and established at an early age.

• Few meet the guideline of at least 60 minutes of moderate-intensity activity daily.

• Activity levels typically decline from childhood to adolescence.

• There are problems making satisfactory measurements.

Page 5: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Moderate-to-vigorous activity levels in boys and girls followed for six

years

Page 6: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Physical activity levels in girls followed from 9 or 10 years of age to

18 or 19 years of age

Page 7: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Physical activity levels in children attending three different primary schools

Children in schools with low amounts of timetabled physical education compensate by being more active outside school.

Note: School 1 – nine hours timetabled PE/wk; school 2 – 2.2 hours timetabled PE/wk; school 3 – 1.8 hours timetabled PE/wk.

Page 8: Chapter 10 Children’s health

BMI values in children and adolescents that predict overweight or obesity in adulthood

BMI 25 kg m2 BMI 30 kg m2

Age (years) Males Females Males Females

11 20.6 20.7 25.1 25.4

12 21.2 21.7 26.0 26.7

13 21.9 22.6 26.8 27.8

14 22.6 23.3 27.6 28.6

15 23.3 23.9 28.3 29.1

16 23.9 24.4 28.9 29.4

17 24.5 24.7 29.4 29.7

18 25.0 25.0 30.0 30.0

Page 9: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Use of percentiles of BMI to indicate overweight (85th) or obesity (95th)

Note: Percentage of US children and adolescents above BMI cut-off points based on reference population, 2008.

Page 10: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Obesity in childhood and adolescence increases the risk for obesity in adulthood

Note: Retrospective study of 854 children born in Washington State.

Page 11: Chapter 10 Children’s health

• Some cross-sectional studies have found an inverse relationship between activity levels and markers for adiposity;

but• this is not a universal finding;• prospective studies have sometimes, not always,

found that higher levels of activity were related to smaller increases in BMI and adiposity.

Does inactivity influence childhood adiposity?

Page 12: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Mean difference in BMI and adiposity in adolescents classified as either inactive or active

Note: Girls were studied longitudinally from age 9 or 10 to age 18 or 19.

Page 13: Chapter 10 Children’s health

‘The evidence base on childhood obesity prevention has increased markedly in recent years … [it] remains extremely limited, and no successful, high-quality, generalizable interventions presently exist.’

(Reilly 2006)

Interventions to prevent childhood obesity

Page 14: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Exercise does not consistently decrease body weight or BMI but 155 to 180 mins/wk of moderate-to-high intensity aerobic exercise is effective for reducing body fat in overweight children and adolescents.

Exercise in the management of over-fatness in children and adolescents

Page 15: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Hospital admissions to English hospitals in children aged 0–18

Page 16: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Physical activity and prevention of type 2 diabetes

• There have been no trials – and there will not be, numbers would be prohibitive;

but• high levels of activity or fitness have been

positively associated with insulin sensitivity and inversely associated with insulin resistance in major studies in the US and Sweden.

Page 17: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Odds of having CVD risk factors in US adolescents aged 12–19 with low

(versus moderate or high) fitness

Page 18: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Prevalence of selected CVD risk factors at age 26 according to TV viewing

between ages 5 and 15

Note: Data from New Zealand, 2004.

Page 19: Chapter 10 Children’s health

BMI and CVD risk markers in obese children and controls (obese and normal weight) at baseline, after one year of intervention and one year after

the end of intervention

Note: Intervention = exercise, nutrition education, behaviour therapy.

Page 20: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Side-to-side differences in BMC of humerus, according to biological age of starting training in tennis/squash players

Page 21: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Bone mineral density in soccer players at weight-bearing and non-weight-

bearing sites

Page 22: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Exercise recommendations for enhancing bone mineral accrual in children and adolescents

Mode Impact activities, such as gymnastics, plyometrics, and jumping, and moderate-intensity resistance training; participation in sports that involve running and jumping (soccer, basketball) is likely to be of benefit, but scientific evidence is lacking.

Intensity High, in terms of bone-loading forces; for safety reasons, resistance training should be < 60% of one-repetition maximum.

Frequency At least 3 days per week.Duration 10–20 min (two times per day or more may be more effective).

Page 23: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Summary I

• Many young people exhibit low levels of physical activity. Levels typically decline during the transition from childhood to adolescence.

• Physical activity and physical fitness are related in young people, although correlations are often low.

• Activity levels can be increased through school-based programmes which involve the family and/or community.

• The prevalence of obesity among children and adolescents has increased in many countries in recent years.

• Physical activity and adiposity may be inversely related in young people.

Page 24: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Summary II

• Physical activity can contribute to the prevention and management of obesity in children and adolescents, but evidence to support effective interventions is limited.

• The prevalence of type 2 diabetes has increased in children and adolescents in recent years, but remains low in children.

• High levels of physical activity are positively associated with insulin sensitivity and negatively associated with insulin resistance in children and adolescents.

Page 25: Chapter 10 Children’s health

Summary III

• High levels of physical activity and physical fitness are related to healthy CVD risk factor profiles. Exercise training may lead to favourable changes in CVD risk factors in children who exhibit unhealthy profiles.

• Physical activity, particularly high impact activity, promotes bone growth and strength in children and adolescents, but is unlikely to reduce the risk of fracture in old age unless physical activity is maintained.