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Cross-Sectional Comparison of Physical Activity and Inactivity Patterns in Chinese and Filipino Youth – Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey

Cross-Sectional Comparison of Physical Activity and Inactivity Patterns in Chinese and Filipino Youth

Citation

Tudor-Locke, Catrine; Ainsworth, Barbara E.; Adair, Linda S.; Du, Shufa; Lee, Nanette R.; & Popkin, Barry M. (2007). Cross-Sectional Comparison of Physical Activity and Inactivity Patterns in Chinese and Filipino Youth. Child: Care, Health, and Development, 33(1), 59-66.

Abstract

Background: To compare and contrast youth physical activity (PA) and inactivity patterns in two developing Asian countries: the Philippines and China. Methods: Comparative analysis of 1997–1999 Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey and the 1997 China Health and Nutrition Survey, large-scale surveys that included questions on type, frequency and duration of: commuting mode to school, sports/exercise in and outside of school, select sedentary activities and chores. Results: Filipino data included 760 males and 872 females aged 14–16 years. The comparable Chinese sample consisted of 202 males and 197 females. Active commuting is proportionately high in both countries (70–71% in the Philippines vs. 77–90% in China), although commuting by bicycling is rare in the Philippines (<1%) vs. China (?35%). Patterns of school sport/exercise participation differ between countries by gender; more Filipino males report school sport/exercise than females (63 vs. 49%) vs. China, where more females participate than males (75 vs. 69%). Sport/exercise outside of school is proportionately low (6–12%) for youth from both countries with a single exception: 74% of Filipino males participate in extra-curricular sport/exercise. Although a higher percentage of Filipino youth report watching television >4 h/day (<10%) vs. Chinese youth (<1%), both are lower than comparable US reports. Conclusion: In the Philippines, continued modernization augurs a decrease in local primary PA sources (chores and active commuting). In China, where youth already are not expected to perform chores, shifts to more passive commuting modes (i.e. increased motorized transportation) are anticipated.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2214.2006.00612.x

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2007

Journal Title

Child: Care, Health, and Development

Author(s)

Tudor-Locke, Catrine
Ainsworth, Barbara E.
Adair, Linda S.
Du, Shufa
Lee, Nanette R.
Popkin, Barry M.