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Driving down daily step counts: the impact of being driven to school on physical activity and sedentary behavior

journal contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Trapp, B Giles-Conti, H Christian, Anna TimperioAnna Timperio, G McCormack, M Bulsara, K Villanueva
This study investigated whether being driven to school was associated with lower weekday and weekend step counts, less active out-of-school leisure pursuits, and more sedentary behavior. Boys aged 10–13 years (n = 384) and girls aged 9–13 years (n = 500) attending 25 Australian primary schools wore a pedometer and completed a travel diary for one week. Parents and children completed surveys capturing leisure activity, screen time, and sociodemographics. Commute distance was objectively measured. Car travel was the most frequent mode of school transportation (boys: 51%, girls: 58%). After adjustment (sociodemographics, commute distance, and school clustering) children who were driven recorded fewer weekday steps than those who walked (girls: –1,393 steps p < .001, boys: –1,569 steps, p = .009) and participated in fewer active leisure activities (girls only: p = .043). There were no differences in weekend steps or screen time. Being driven to and from school is associated with less weekday pedometer-determined physical activity in 9- to 13-year-old elementary-school children. Encouraging children, especially girls, to walk to and from school (even for part of the way for those living further distances) could protect the health and well-being of those children who are insufficiently active.

History

Journal

Pediatric Exercise Science

Volume

25

Issue

3

Pagination

337 - 346

Publisher

Human Kinetics

Location

Champaign, Ill.

ISSN

0899-8493

eISSN

1543-2920

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2013, Human Kinetics

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