PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 3 September 2001, p. e44
ELECTRONIC ARTICLE:
How Much Activity Do Youth Get? A Quantitative Review of
Heart-Rate Measured Activity
Received Oct 30, 2000; accepted Apr 11, 2001.
,
From the * Departments of Pediatrics, State University of New
York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York; Objective. Recommendations for adult
physical activity have shifted from 20 to 60 minutes of continuous
vigorous activity 3 to 5 times a week to accumulation of 30 minutes of
moderate to vigorous physical activity most days of the week.
Variations of these guidelines also have been suggested for children,
based on the idea of accumulating moderate to vigorous physical
activity throughout the day, rather than attaining vigorous physical
activity in continuous blocks. The goal of this study was to assess
accumulated amounts of physical activity at different intensities in
children.
Methods. We reviewed 26 studies (n = 1883) in youth aged 3 to 17 years that used heart-rate recording to
measure physical activity in children to determine accumulated daily
activity. Included were studies that provided time being active for at
least 2 heart rate intensities at or above 120 beats/minute.
Descriptive characteristics of the study groups were determined, and
the influence of age, gender, and hours and days of observation on the
slope of activity time as a function of percentage of heart rate
reserve (HRR) was determined using hierarchical linear regression.
Results. Youth attained 128.0 ± 45.6, 47.1 ± 14.9, 29.3 ± 13.7, and 14.7 ± 6.0 minutes/day between 20%
to 40%, 40% to 50%, 50% to 60%, and greater than 60% HRR,
respectively. Age was a significant predictor of the intercept and
slope of the physical activity and %HRR relationship.
Conclusion. Youth of all ages attain >60 minutes/day of
low-intensity physical activity and approximately 30 minutes/day of
activity at traditional cardiovascular fitness training levels of
50% or more of HRR. Recommendations for youth activity are
discussed.
Children's Hospital of Eastern
Ontario Research Institute, Ontario, Canada; and § Department of
Physical Therapy, Nutrition and Exercise Sciences, State University of
New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York.
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