Background: Leisure time is increasingly spent in sedentary pursuits such as screen-viewing (eg, television/DVD viewing and computer use), motorised travel, school/work and sitting-based socialising (eg, social media and chatting). Sedentary screen time, particularly TV, appears to play an important role in the aetiology of obesity due to its co-occurrence with other unhealthy behaviours such as snacking on energy-dense foods, low levels of physical activity and inadequate sleep. More information is needed on how to reduce sedentary behaviours. Most interventions have focused on young people and a number of systematic reviews exist on this topic. Objective: To synthesise systematic reviews and metaanalyses of interventions aimed at decreasi...
School-based interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in children: a systematic reviewProlonged, ...
The purpose of this review is to describe the amount of time children spend in sedentary behaviour a...
UNLABELLED: Regular physical activity and limiting extended periods of sitting are two behaviours cr...
Background: There is increasing concern about the time young people spend in sedentary behaviour ('s...
Background There is increasing concern about the time people spend in sedentary behaviour, including...
Objectives: To identify effective interventions that promote healthy screen time use and reduce sede...
Family involvement in interventions to reduce sedentary time may help foster appropriate long-term s...
Aim or objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of behavioural interventions that report sedentary b...
This descriptive systematic review describes intervention trials for children and youth that targete...
Aim or objective To evaluate the effectiveness of behavioural interventions that report sedentary be...
Sedentary behaviours are highly associated with obesity and other important health outcomes in adole...
Previous research suggests that reducing sedentary screen behaviors may be a strategy for preventing...
<strong>Introduction: </strong>Prolonged, uninterrupted periods of sedentary time may be associated ...
This systematic review is an update examining the relationships between objectively and subjectively...
1. Sedentary behaviour is not simply a lack of physical activity but is a cluster of individual beha...
School-based interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in children: a systematic reviewProlonged, ...
The purpose of this review is to describe the amount of time children spend in sedentary behaviour a...
UNLABELLED: Regular physical activity and limiting extended periods of sitting are two behaviours cr...
Background: There is increasing concern about the time young people spend in sedentary behaviour ('s...
Background There is increasing concern about the time people spend in sedentary behaviour, including...
Objectives: To identify effective interventions that promote healthy screen time use and reduce sede...
Family involvement in interventions to reduce sedentary time may help foster appropriate long-term s...
Aim or objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of behavioural interventions that report sedentary b...
This descriptive systematic review describes intervention trials for children and youth that targete...
Aim or objective To evaluate the effectiveness of behavioural interventions that report sedentary be...
Sedentary behaviours are highly associated with obesity and other important health outcomes in adole...
Previous research suggests that reducing sedentary screen behaviors may be a strategy for preventing...
<strong>Introduction: </strong>Prolonged, uninterrupted periods of sedentary time may be associated ...
This systematic review is an update examining the relationships between objectively and subjectively...
1. Sedentary behaviour is not simply a lack of physical activity but is a cluster of individual beha...
School-based interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in children: a systematic reviewProlonged, ...
The purpose of this review is to describe the amount of time children spend in sedentary behaviour a...
UNLABELLED: Regular physical activity and limiting extended periods of sitting are two behaviours cr...