Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers

Abstract Background This study focuses on the comparison of weekday/weekend parent-child behavioural patterns (step count (SC) and screen time (ST)) and answers the question of whether achieving the recommendations for daily SC (10,000) in parents also helps their preschool children achieve the reco...

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Main Authors: Dagmar Sigmundová, Erik Sigmund, Petr Badura, Jana Vokáčová, Lucie Trhlíková, Jens Bucksch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2016-08-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3586-8
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spelling doaj-48911841872b478dac16517009e611da2020-11-24T21:09:03ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582016-08-011611910.1186/s12889-016-3586-8Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolersDagmar Sigmundová0Erik Sigmund1Petr Badura2Jana Vokáčová3Lucie Trhlíková4Jens Bucksch5Faculty of Physical Culture, Palacký UniversityFaculty of Physical Culture, Palacký UniversityFaculty of Physical Culture, Palacký UniversityFaculty of Physical Culture, Palacký UniversityFaculty of Physical Culture, Palacký UniversityDepartment of Prevention and Health Promotion, Bielefeld University, School of Public HealthAbstract Background This study focuses on the comparison of weekday/weekend parent-child behavioural patterns (step count (SC) and screen time (ST)) and answers the question of whether achieving the recommendations for daily SC (10,000) in parents also helps their preschool children achieve the recommended daily SC (11,500). Methods The participants (278 parents aged 30–45 and their 194 children aged 4–7) were randomly recruited from 10 Czech public kindergartens. The participants recorded SC (pedometer Yamax Digiwalker SW-200) and ST duration (proxy-report) for seven consecutive days (≥8 h/day) during September–October 2014 and April–May 2015. Differences between weekdays/weekends SC or ST were tested using a paired t-test. The odds of achieving the recommended daily SC for children were estimated using general logistic regression separately for weekdays and weekends. Results Only the mothers were found to have a significantly lower SC at weekends than on weekdays. All of the participants showed significantly more ST at weekends than on weekdays (daughters: 78.6 vs. 45.7 min/day, p < 0.001; sons: 78.8 vs. 55.8 min/day; mothers: 93.0 vs. 68.3 min/day; and fathers: 116.6 vs. 87.5 min/day). Daughters and sons were significantly more likely to achieve daily SC recommendation if a) the SC on weekdays during the daily routine in kindergarten exceeded the median of kindergarten SC or b) at weekends if their mother (OR: 9.67, 95 % CI: 3.57–26.23) exceeded 10,000 steps a day. Conclusions Especially at weekends, preschoolers have higher odds of meeting the recommended 11,500 steps per day when their mother reaches 10,000 steps per day and this is independent of the amount of parents’ ST. Moreover, physical activity in kindergarten helps preschool children meet the 11,500 recommended steps per day on weekdays. Therefore, interventions to promote physical activity in preschoolers should focus on kindergartens and encourage involvement of their families.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3586-8Step countYamax pedometerMotherFatherKindergartenWeekdays
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dagmar Sigmundová
Erik Sigmund
Petr Badura
Jana Vokáčová
Lucie Trhlíková
Jens Bucksch
spellingShingle Dagmar Sigmundová
Erik Sigmund
Petr Badura
Jana Vokáčová
Lucie Trhlíková
Jens Bucksch
Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
BMC Public Health
Step count
Yamax pedometer
Mother
Father
Kindergarten
Weekdays
author_facet Dagmar Sigmundová
Erik Sigmund
Petr Badura
Jana Vokáčová
Lucie Trhlíková
Jens Bucksch
author_sort Dagmar Sigmundová
title Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
title_short Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
title_full Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
title_fullStr Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
title_full_unstemmed Weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
title_sort weekday-weekend patterns of physical activity and screen time in parents and their pre-schoolers
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2016-08-01
description Abstract Background This study focuses on the comparison of weekday/weekend parent-child behavioural patterns (step count (SC) and screen time (ST)) and answers the question of whether achieving the recommendations for daily SC (10,000) in parents also helps their preschool children achieve the recommended daily SC (11,500). Methods The participants (278 parents aged 30–45 and their 194 children aged 4–7) were randomly recruited from 10 Czech public kindergartens. The participants recorded SC (pedometer Yamax Digiwalker SW-200) and ST duration (proxy-report) for seven consecutive days (≥8 h/day) during September–October 2014 and April–May 2015. Differences between weekdays/weekends SC or ST were tested using a paired t-test. The odds of achieving the recommended daily SC for children were estimated using general logistic regression separately for weekdays and weekends. Results Only the mothers were found to have a significantly lower SC at weekends than on weekdays. All of the participants showed significantly more ST at weekends than on weekdays (daughters: 78.6 vs. 45.7 min/day, p < 0.001; sons: 78.8 vs. 55.8 min/day; mothers: 93.0 vs. 68.3 min/day; and fathers: 116.6 vs. 87.5 min/day). Daughters and sons were significantly more likely to achieve daily SC recommendation if a) the SC on weekdays during the daily routine in kindergarten exceeded the median of kindergarten SC or b) at weekends if their mother (OR: 9.67, 95 % CI: 3.57–26.23) exceeded 10,000 steps a day. Conclusions Especially at weekends, preschoolers have higher odds of meeting the recommended 11,500 steps per day when their mother reaches 10,000 steps per day and this is independent of the amount of parents’ ST. Moreover, physical activity in kindergarten helps preschool children meet the 11,500 recommended steps per day on weekdays. Therefore, interventions to promote physical activity in preschoolers should focus on kindergartens and encourage involvement of their families.
topic Step count
Yamax pedometer
Mother
Father
Kindergarten
Weekdays
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3586-8
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