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The relationship between transport-to-school habits and physical activity in a a sample of New Zealand adolescents

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Version 2 2023-05-29, 15:05
Version 1 2022-05-23, 07:50
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-29, 15:05 authored by Chiew Ching Kek, Enrique García BengoecheaEnrique García Bengoechea, John C. Spence, Sandra Mandic
Objectives: Adolescents using active transport (AT) to school have higher levels of physical activity (PA) compared with motorized transport (MT) users. This study compared school day and weekend day PA in adolescents using AT, MT, or combined AT and MT (AT + MT) to travel to school. Methods: Adolescents (n = 314; age: 14.7 § 1.4 years; 32.8% boys) from Dunedin (New Zealand) wore an accelerometer for 7 days and completed a self-reported survey regarding mode of transport to school (73 AT, 56 AT + MT, and 185 MT). Data were analyzed using t tests, analysis of variance, and x2 tests. Results: Although the proportion of adolescents meeting PA guidelines significantly differed among transport groups (AT, 47.9%; AT + MT, 46.4%; MT, 33.5%; p = 0.048; overall, 39.2%), the observed differences were due mainly to girls. Compared with MT, AT and AT +MT engaged in more moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) per day (AT: 61.2 § 23.2 min; AT + MT: 59.6 § 21.7 min; MT: 52.5 § 19.6 min; p = 0.004; p < 0.001, adjusted for gender), per school day and before school. Immediately after school (15:00 16:00), AT engaged in significantly more MVPA compared with AT +MT and MT. No differences in MVPA between the groups were observed in the late afternoon/early evening period during school days or on weekend days. Conclusion: Compared with MT users, adolescent girls using AT or AT +MT accumulated more MVPA during school commute time. AT +MT to school is also a plausible way to increase adolescent girls’ PA when AT only is not feasible

History

Publication

Journal of Sport and Health Science;8,pp 463-470

Publisher

Elsevier

Note

peer-reviewed

Language

English

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