4.6 Article

Joint physical-activity/screen-time trajectories during early childhood: socio-demographic predictors and consequences on health-related quality-of-life and socio-emotional outcomes

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12966-019-0816-3

Keywords

Time use; Trajectory analysis; Physical activity; Screen time; Child development; Health

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course [CE140100027]
  2. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT130100637]

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BackgroundUnderstanding the early roots of physical activity and sedentary behaviors is critical to developing intervention programs that promote healthy lifestyle habits in infants and children. There is, however, no evidence on how these behaviors cluster and develop together during early childhood. The aim of this study was to identify single and joint longitudinal trajectories in physical activity and screen time amongst children aged 0 to 9years, their social-demographic predictors and their prospective health-related quality-of-life and socio-emotional outcomes.MethodsThree waves of data from The Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, a national study tracking two cohorts every 2years (B-cohort, 0-5years, n=4,164; K-cohort, 4-9years, n=3,974) were analysed. Growth mixture modelling was applied to longitudinal time-use diary data to identify joint trajectories in children's physical activity and screen time over Waves 1-3. Key socio-demographic variables measured at Wave 1 were used to predict membership in different trajectories. The prospective consequences (at Wave 3) of time-use trajectories on health-related quality-of-life and socio-emotional outcomes were assessed.ResultsThree physical-activity/screen-time trajectories were identified for both cohorts: Cluster-A-children who maintained low levels of physical activity and screen time (?50% of the sample), Cluster-B-children who progressively increased physical activity and maintained low screen-time levels (?25%), and Cluster-C-children who maintained low physical-activity levels and increased screen time (?25%). Children in Cluster-B experienced the best health-related quality-of-life and socio-emotional outcomes, while those in Cluster-C experienced the worst. Children who were female, Indigenous, from non-English-speaking backgrounds, not living with two biological parents, in more affluent households and neighbourhoods, without siblings and with parents with poor mental health were at greater risk of falling into Cluster-A or Cluster-C.ConclusionOur findings identified which children are most at-risk of falling into time-use trajectories that lead to poor health-related quality-of-life and socio-emotional outcomes later in life, increasing our ability to monitor, detect and prevent these suboptimal behaviours prior to their onset.

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