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Journal Article

Citation

Faulkner GEJ, Buliung RN, Flora PK, Fusco C. Prev. Med. 2009; 48(1): 3-8.

Affiliation

Faculty of Physical Education and Health, University of Toronto, 55 Harbord Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S 2W6.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ypmed.2008.10.017

PMID

19014963

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Active school transport (AST) may be an important source of children's physical activity (PA). Innovative solutions that increase PA time for children, without putting added pressure on the school curriculum, merit consideration. Before implementing such solutions, it is important to demonstrate that active school transport is associated with health-related outcomes. METHODS: Following a standardized protocol, we conducted a systematic review of published research to address this question and explore whether children who actively commute to school also have a healthier body weight. Online searches of 5 electronic databases were conducted. Potential studies were screened on the basis of objective measures of physical activity. RESULTS: Thirteen studies were included in this review. Nine studies demonstrated that children who actively commute to school accumulate significantly more PA and two studies reported that they expended significantly more kilocalories per day. Where studies examined body weight (n=10), only one reported active commuters having a lower body weight. CONCLUSIONS: These studies demonstrate that active school commuters tend to be more physically active overall than passive commuters. However, evidence for the impact of AST in promoting healthy body weights for children and youth is not compelling.

Language: en

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