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Healthy behaviours and abdominal adiposity in adolescents from southern Italy.

Authors :
Iaccarino Idelson P
Scalfi L
Vaino N
Mobilia S
Montagnese C
Franzese A
Valerio G
Source :
Public health nutrition [Public Health Nutr] 2014 Feb; Vol. 17 (2), pp. 353-60. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Jan 28.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Objective: The present study aimed to evaluate the prevalence of meeting health recommendations on diet and physical activity (having breakfast, eating fruit and vegetables, consumption of milk/yoghurt, performing moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, limiting television watching) and to assess junk snack food consumption in adolescents from southern Italy. The association between healthy behaviours and abdominal adiposity was also examined.<br />Design: In a cross-sectional protocol, anthropometric data were measured by trained operators while other data were collected through a structured interview.<br />Setting: Three high schools in Naples, Italy.<br />Subjects: A sample of 478 students, aged 14-17 years, was studied.<br />Results: The proportion of adolescents who met each of the health recommendations varied: 55·4% had breakfast on ≥6 d/week; 2·9% ate ≥5 servings of fruit and vegetables/d; 1·9% had ≥3 servings of milk/yoghurt daily; 13·6% performed moderate-to-vigorous physical activity for ≥60 min/d; and 46·3% watched television for <2 h/d. More than 65% of adolescents consumed ≥1 serving of junk snack foods/d. Only 5% fulfilled at least three recommendations. Healthy habits tended to correlate with each other. As the number of health recommendations met decreased, the percentage of adolescents with high abdominal adiposity (waist-to-height ratio ≥0·5) increased. The trend was not significant when the proportion of overweight/obese adolescents was considered. Logistic regression analysis indicated that male gender and watching television for ≥2 h/d were independently associated with a higher waist-to-height ratio.<br />Conclusions: Most adolescents failed to meet the five health recommendations considered. Male gender and excessive television watching were associated with abdominal adiposity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1475-2727
Volume :
17
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Public health nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23351439
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980012005654