4.1 Article

Effect of Sleep Duration, Diet, and Physical Activity on Obesity and Overweight Elementary School Students in Shanghai

Journal

JOURNAL OF SCHOOL HEALTH
Volume 88, Issue 2, Pages 112-121

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/josh.12583

Keywords

obese; overweight; children; physical activities; dietary habits; sleep

Funding

  1. Chinese National Natural Science Foundation [Chinese 81,422,040,81,172,685]
  2. MOE New Century Excellent Talents [NCET-13-0362]
  3. Shanghai Science and Technology Commission [12,411,950,405, 14,441,904,004, 13QH1401800]
  4. fourth round of Three-Year Public Health Action Plan [GWIV-36]
  5. Shanghai Municipal Education Commission [D1502]
  6. Ministry of Science and Technology [2010CB535000]
  7. Group Foundation by Xinhua Hospital Affiliated to Medicine School of Shanghai Jiaotong University
  8. Foundation by Abbott/World Health Foundation, Development Center of Clinical Nutrition [AFINS-HOPE-2014-01]
  9. Shanghai Science and Technology Committee [124119a2800]
  10. Project for the Prevention and Control of Chronic Diseases, Shanghai Shen-kang Hospital Development Center [SHDC12015306]

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BACKGROUNDThis was a cross-sectional survey to investigate the relationship of age, parent education, sleep duration, physical activity, and dietary habits with overweight or obesity in school-age children in Shanghai. METHODSThe survey gathered information from 13,001 children in grades 1 through 5 (age 6 to 10years) among 26 elementary schools in 7 districts. Activity level was evaluated using the International Children's Leisure Activities Study Survey Questionnaire (CLASS-C). The definitions of normal, overweight, and obese were adjusted for each age. RESULTSLogistic regression analysis indicated that age, being male, having 10hours of sleep on non-school days, eating 1 vegetable/day, or drinking 1 sugar-sweetened drink/day increased the risk for a child being overweight or obese compared with having >10hours of sleep or 3 vegetables or 3 sugar-sweetened drinks/month (p.008). Having >2hours of outdoor activities on non-school days reduced the risk of being overweight or obese compared with 2hours of outdoor activities on non-school days (p<.001). CONCLUSIONSWe found that age, sex, sleep, and some dietary habits impacted weight, and suggests that specific cultural and economic factors may impact risk of a child being overweight or obese.

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