Child, family and household characteristics associated with physical activity in Samoan children aged 3-8 years: A cross-sectional study

PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 Apr 17;4(4):e0002886. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0002886. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Physical activity is a key component of many obesity prevention strategies. The aim of this analysis was to identify child, family, and household characteristics associated with parent-reported physical activity in Samoan children aged 3-8 years. Children (n = 445; 51.2% female, mean age 5.4 years) were part of an ongoing, mixed-longitudinal study of child growth, development, and wellbeing (the Ola Tuputupua'e cohort). Bivariate analyses and multivariate generalized linear regressions were conducted to investigate the relationship of child, family, and household characteristics with physical activity level, measured using the Netherlands Physical Activity Questionnaire (NPAQ). Children were classified as being 'highly active' if they had NPAQ scores in the 75th percentile or above. Among the n = 111 children classified as 'highly active', n = 67 (60.4%) were boys. After adjusting for child, family, and household-level characteristics, hours of child sleep per night was the only variable significantly associated with odds of being highly active. Compared to children who slept less than 9 hours at night, those who slept 10-10.99 hours (OR: 5.97, 95% CI: 2.14-18.13) and 11+ hours (OR: 25.75, 95% CI: 8.14-90.12) had higher odds of being 'highly active'. Future research should examine the mechanisms driving the relationship between nighttime sleep and physical activity among Samoan children. Intervening on sleep duration and quality may improve physical activity and, in turn, obesity risk in this setting.

Grants and funding

The Ola Tuputupua’e study received financial support from the following sources: Yale University (Faculty Funding [NLH], David Dull Internship Fund [CCC], Jan A.J. Stolwijk Fellowship Fund, Downs International Health Student Travel Fellowship, Thomas C. Barry Travel Fellowship [CCC]), US National Institutes of Health (NIH) Minority and Health Disparities International Research Training Program (NIMHD T37MD008655 [CCC]), U.S. Fulbright Graduate Student Research Fellowship [CCC], Brown University (International Health Institute, Nora Kahn Piore Award [CCC], and Framework in Global Health Program [CRW]) and Brown University Population Studies and Training Center which receives funding from the NIH for training (T32 HD007338) and general support (P2C HD041020), F31 HL147414 [CCC] and R01 HL093093 [STM, NLH] for infrastructural support. While writing this publication, CCC was supported by Fogarty Global Health Equity Scholars Program (FIC D43TW010540), and Yale Center for Clinical Investigation Multidisciplinary Post-Doctoral Training Program in Translational Research (CTSA Grant Number TL1 TR001864 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Science, a component of the NIH. The contents of the publication are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NIH.