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1. Moving forward by looking back: lessons learned from long-lost lifestyles.

2. The Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Children and Youth: Implications for practitioners, professionals, and organizations.

3. Research that informs Canada’s physical activity guides: an introduction.

4. Symposium overview. Dietary Reference Intakes: considerations for physical activity.

5. Canadian Physical Activity Guidelines for the Early Years (aged 0-4 years).

6. Impact of integrating a physical activity counsellor into the primary health care team: physical activity and health outcomes of the Physical Activity Counselling randomized controlled trial.

7. We want more! Examining the perceived training and information needs of health and fitness practitioners about disability and physical activity.

8. Physical activity guidelines and guides for Canadians: facts and future.

9. Canada’s physical activity guides: background, process, and development.

10. Content of physical activity documentation in Canadian family physicians' electronic medical records.

11. Considerations for the development of a physical activity guide for Canadians with physical disabilities.

12. Physical activity guidelines for children and youth.

13. Physical activity of Aboriginal people in Canada.

14. Incidental movement, lifestyle-embedded activity and sleep: new frontiers in physical activity assessment.

15. Facteurs dont il faut tenir compte dans la création d’un guide d’activité physique pour les Canadiens qui ont un handicap physique.

16. Health care costs of physical inactivity in Canadian adults.

17. Physical activity energy expenditure and fat-free mass: relationship with metabolic syndrome in overweight or obese postmenopausal women.

18. Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Adults aged 18–64 years and Adults aged 65 years or older: an integration of physical activity, sedentary behaviour, and sleep.

19. Optimal messaging of the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Adults aged 18–64 years and Adults aged 65 years and older.

20. Dissemination and implementation of national physical activity, sedentary behaviour, and/or sleep guidelines among community-dwelling adults aged 18 years and older: a systematic scoping review and suggestions for future reporting and research.

21. Physical activity guides for Canadians: messaging strategies, realistic expectations for change, and evaluation.

22. Canada’s physical activity guides: has their release had an impact?

23. Limitations of Canada’s physical activity data: implications for monitoring trends.

24. Les guides d’activité physique du Canada : leur publication a t-elle eu un effet?

25. Are Canadian protein and physical activity guidelines optimal for sarcopenia prevention in older adults?

26. Chronic health disparities among refugee and immigrant children in Canada.

27. Is adherence to the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Behaviour Guidelines for Children and Youth associated with improved indicators of physical, mental, and social health?

28. Associations between physical activity, screen time, and fitness among 6- to 10-year-old children living in Edmonton, Canada.

29. Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Children and Youth: An Integration of Physical Activity, Sedentary Behaviour, and Sleep.

30. Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Children and Youth: Exploring the perceptions of stakeholders regarding their acceptability, barriers to uptake, and dissemination.

31. Associations between sleep duration, sedentary time, physical activity, and health indicators among Canadian children and youth using compositional analyses.

32. Associations between added sugar (solid vs. liquid) intakes, diet quality, and adiposity indicators in Canadian children.

33. Knowledge and awareness of Canadian Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines: a synthesis of existing evidence.

34. Four minutes of in-class high-intensity interval activity improves selective attention in 9- to 11-year olds.

35. Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology position stand: Benefit and risk for promoting childhood physical activity.

36. Feasibility and efficacy of a 12-week supervised exercise intervention for colorectal cancer survivors1.

37. Interrelationships between changes in anthropometric variables and computed tomography indices of abdominal fat distribution in response to a 1-year physical activity-healthy eating lifestyle modification program in abdominally obese men.

38. A pilot program for physical exercise promotion in adults with type 1 diabetes: the PEP-1 program.

39. Physical activity level, waist circumference, and mortality.

40. Evidence-based risk assessment and recommendations for physical activity clearance: pregnancy.

41. Exercise, aging, and cancer.

42. Think tank on school-aged children: nutrition and physical activity to prevent the rise in obesity.

43. Who will be active? Predicting exercise stage transitions after hospitalization for coronary artery disease.

44. Introduction to the Canadian 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Adults aged 18–64 years and Adults aged 65 years or older: an integration of physical activity, sedentary behaviour, and sleep.

45. Evidence-informed physical activity guidelines for Canadian adults.