4.6 Article

The impact of COVID-19 on physical activity behaviour in Italian primary school children: a comparison before and during pandemic considering gender differences

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-12483-0

Keywords

Physical inactivity; Children; COVID-19; Accelerometer; Sedentary behaviour

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This study analyzed the impact of COVID-19 on the physical activity of Italian primary school children, and found that the pandemic significantly decreased the time spent in physical activity and increased sedentary behavior among children. Boys were more affected than girls.
Background The World Health Organization stated an average of 60 min of Moderate to Vigorous Physical Activity (MVPA) that children should accumulate every day. Nevertheless physical inactivity is growing and, due to restrictions imposed during pandemic, PA levels of children might be more negatively affected. The study aimed to analyse the impact of COVID-19 on the PA of an Italian sample of primary school children by comparing it before and during COVID-19 considering gender differences. Methods A pre-post analysis (October 2019-January 2021) was conducted using a randomized sample (N = 77) from the I-MOVE study settled in an Italian primary school. Both objective (Actigraph accelerometers) and self-reported (PAQ-c questionnaires) assessments of PA were performed. Changes were compared using T-Student and Chi-Square test. Gender differences were calculated using Anova. Results Weekly and daily minutes time spent in MVPA significantly decreased respectively by - 30.59 +/- 120.87 and - 15.32 +/- 16.21 from before to during pandemic while the weekly time spent in sedentary behaviour increased (+ 1196.01 +/- 381.49). PAQ-c scores followed the same negative trend (- 0.87 +/- 0.72). Boys seem to have suffered more than girls from the imposed restrictions. Conclusion These findings outline the need for strategies to promote PA and reduce sedentary behaviours in children to prevent COVID-19 restriction long-term effects.

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