Health-Related Quality of Life and Lifestyle Behavior Clusters in School-Aged Children from 12 Countries

Dumuid, Dorothea ; Olds, Timothy ; Lewis, Lucy K. ; Martin-Fernández, Josep Antoni ; Katzmarzyk, Peter T. ; Barreira, Tiago ; Broyles, Stephanie T. ; Chaput, Jean-Philippe ; Fogelholm, Mikael ; Hu, Gang ; Kuriyan, Rebecca ; Kurpad, Anura ; Lambert, Estelle V. ; Maia, José ; Matsudo, Victor ; Onywera, Vincent O. ; Sarmiento, Olga L. ; Standage, Martyn ; Tremblay, Mark S. ; Tudor-Locke, Catrine ; Zhao, Pei ; Gillison, Fiona ; Maher, Carol (2017) Health-Related Quality of Life and Lifestyle Behavior Clusters in School-Aged Children from 12 Countries The Journal of Pediatrics, 183 . 178-183.e2. ISSN 00223476

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.12.048

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2016.12.048

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the relationship between children's lifestyles and health-related quality of life and to explore whether this relationship varies among children from different world regions. Study design: This study used cross-sectional data from the International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment. Children (9-11 years) were recruited from sites in 12 nations (n = 5759). Clustering input variables were 24-hour accelerometry and self-reported diet and screen time. Health-related quality of life was self-reported with KIDSCREEN-10. Cluster analyses (using compositional analysis techniques) were performed on a site-wise basis. Lifestyle behavior cluster characteristics were compared between sites. The relationship between cluster membership and health-related quality of life was assessed with the use of linear models. Results: Lifestyle behavior clusters were similar across the 12 sites, with clusters commonly characterized by (1) high physical activity (actives); (2) high sedentary behavior (sitters); (3) high screen time/unhealthy eating pattern (junk-food screenies); and (4) low screen time/healthy eating pattern and moderate physical activity/sedentary behavior (all-rounders). Health-related quality of life was greatest in the all-rounders cluster. Conclusions: Children from different world regions clustered into groups of similar lifestyle behaviors. Cluster membership was related to differing health-related quality of life, with children from the all-rounders cluster consistently reporting greatest health-related quality of life at sites around the world. Findings support the importance of a healthy combination of lifestyle behaviors in childhood: low screen time, healthy eating pattern, and balanced daily activity behaviors (physical activity and sedentary behavior).

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Elsevier Inc.
Keywords:compositional analysis; diet; physical activity; screen time; sedentary behavior
ID Code:126301
Deposited On:13 Oct 2022 05:47
Last Modified:13 Oct 2022 05:47

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