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The effects of a 2-year individualized and family-based lifestyle intervention on physical activity, sedentary behavior and diet in children.

Authors :
Viitasalo A
Eloranta AM
Lintu N
Väistö J
Venäläinen T
Kiiskinen S
Karjalainen P
Peltola J
Lampinen EK
Haapala EA
Paananen J
Schwab U
Lindi V
Lakka TA
Source :
Preventive medicine [Prev Med] 2016 Jun; Vol. 87, pp. 81-88. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Feb 23.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the effects of a long-term, individualized and family-based lifestyle intervention on physical activity, sedentary behavior and diet quality in children.<br />Methods: We carried out a 2-year intervention study in a population sample of 506 children aged 6-8years in Finland in 2007-2012. We allocated the participants at baseline in the intervention and control group. We assessed physical activity and sedentary behavior by questionnaires and diet by food records.<br />Results: Total physical activity (+9min/d in intervention group vs. -5min/d in control group, p=0.001 for time*group interaction), unsupervised physical activity (+7min/d vs. -9min/d, p<0.001) and organized sports (+8min/d vs. +3min/d, p=0.001) increased in the intervention group but not in the control group. Using computer and playing video games increased less in the intervention group than in the control group (+9min/d vs. +19min/d, p=0.003). Consumption of vegetables (+12g/d vs. -12g/d, p=0.001), high-fat vegetable-oil based margarine (+10g/d vs. +3g/d, p<0.001) and low-fat milk (+69g/d vs. +11g/d, p=0.042) and intake of dietary fiber (+1.3g/d vs. +0.2g/d, p=0.023), vitamin C (+4.5mg/d vs. -7.2mg/d, p=0.042) and vitamin E (+1.4mg/d vs. +0.5mg/d, p=0.002) increased in the intervention group but not in the control group. Consumption of butter-based spreads increased in the control group but not in the intervention group (+2g/d vs. -1g/d, p=0.002).<br />Conclusions: Individualized and family-based lifestyle intervention increased physical activity, attenuated increase in sedentary behavior and enhanced diet quality in children.<br />Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01803776.<br /> (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1096-0260
Volume :
87
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Preventive medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26915641
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ypmed.2016.02.027