Systematic review of the relationships between physical activity and health indicators in the early years (0-4 years)
University of Alberta · University of Wollongong · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Given the rapid development during the early years (0-4 years), an understanding of the health implications of physical activity is needed. The purpose of this systematic review was to examine the relationships between objectively and subjectively measured physical activity and health indicators in the early years.
Electronic databases were originally searched in April, 2016. Included studies needed to be peer-reviewed, written in English or French, and meet a priori study criteria. The population was apparently healthy children aged 1 month to 59.99 months/4.99 years. The intervention/exposure was objectively and subjectively measured physical activity. The comparator was various volumes, durations, frequencies, patterns, types, and intensities of physical activity. The outcomes were health indicators ranked as critical (adiposity, motor development, psychosocial health, cognitive development, fitness) and important (bone and skeletal health, cardiometabolic health, and risks/harm). The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) framework was used to assess the quality of evidence for each health indicator by each study design.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 68.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 153
Authors
17Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Psychosocial
- Health indicator
- Gerontology
- Biostatistics
- Public health
- Psychological intervention
- Observational study