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Journal article

Time-use patterns and health-related quality of life in adolescents

Abstract:

Objectives

To describe 24-hour time-use patterns and their association with health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in early adolescence.

Methods

The Child Health CheckPoint was a cross-sectional study nested between Waves 6 and 7 of the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children. The participants were 1455 11- to 12-year-olds (39% of Wave 6; 51% boys). The exposure was 24-hour time use measured across 259 activities using the Multimedia Activity Recall for Children and Adolescents. “Average” days were generated from 1 school and 1 nonschool day. Time-use clusters were derived from cluster analysis with compositional inputs. The outcomes were self-reported HRQoL (Physical and Psychosocial Health [PedsQL] summary scores; Child Health Utility 9D [CHU9D] health utility).

Results

Four time-use clusters emerged: “studious actives” (22%; highest school-related time, low screen time), “techno-actives” (33%; highest physical activity, lowest schoolrelated time), “stay home screenies” (23%; highest screen time, lowest passive transport), and “potterers” (21%; low physical activity). Linear regression models, adjusted for a priori confounders, showed that compared with the healthiest “studious actives” (mean [SD]: CHU9D 0.84 [0.14], PedsQL physical 86.8 [10.8], PedsQL psychosocial 79.9 [12.6]), HRQoL in “potterers” was 0.2 to 0.5 SDs lower (mean differences [95% confidence interval]: CHU9D −0.03 [−0.05 to −0.00], PedsQL physical −5.5 [−7.4 to −3.5], PedsQL psychosocial −5.8 [−8.0 to −3.5]).

Conclusions

Discrete time-use patterns exist in Australian young adolescents. The cluster characterized by low physical activity and moderate screen time was associated with the lowest HRQoL. Whether this pattern translates into precursors of noncommunicable diseases remains to be determined.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1542/peds.2016-3656

Authors


More by this author
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0001-6894-5519



Publisher:
American Academy of Pediatrics
Journal:
Pediatrics More from this journal
Volume:
140
Issue:
1
Pages:
e20163656
Publication date:
2017-06-30
Acceptance date:
2017-03-28
DOI:
EISSN:
1098-4275
ISSN:
0031-4005
Pmid:
28759399


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:709928
UUID:
uuid:594af322-864b-46a6-bfef-1614378db121
Local pid:
pubs:709928
Source identifiers:
709928
Deposit date:
2018-04-18

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