Holidays crank up kilos for Aussie kids

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC; SA
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On the cusp of summer holidays, Aussie kids are looking forward to some well-deserved time off. But too much downtime could create health problems, as new research shows that holidays are the prime time for excessive weight gain in kids.

Media release

From: University of South Australia

On the cusp of summer holidays, Aussie kids are looking forward to some well-deserved time off. But too much downtime could create health problems, as new research shows that holidays are the prime time for excessive weight gain in kids.

Conducted by the University of South Australia’s Alliance for Research in Exercise, Nutrition and Activity team, the ‘Life on Holidays’ study assessed changes to children’s fitness and fatness during the holidays. It found that children’s body fat increased at a faster pace during school holidays than in-school periods.

Funded by the NHMRC, the study found that young children (in Grades 4 and 5) expended less energy during holidays than during the school year.

Specifically, children:

·         slept 12 minutes less per day

·         spent 12 minutes less per being physically active

·         spent an additional 70 minutes per day on screen time.

Children’s body fat increased at a greater rate during the holidays, and aerobic fitness declined faster than during the in-school periods.

It is the first study of its kind outside of the US.

In Australia, one in four children and teenagers are overweight or obese. Globally, more than 124 million children and adolescents (6% of girls and 8% of boys) are obese.

Lead researcher, UniSA’s Professor Tim Olds says promoting physical activities for children in the school holidays could help address unhealthy weight gain and declining fitness.

“Like all of us, kids (and their parents) deserve some holiday downtime, but the way they spend their time on holidays is very different from the school term – and in ways which is not always good for children’s health,” Prof Olds says.

“On school holidays, kids are significantly less active than when they’re at school, and this translates into higher body fat percentages and lower levels of fitness.

“During the holidays, kids spend about 12 minutes less each day in moderate to vigorous physical activity – almost an hour and a half a week – and get more than an hour’s extra screen time each day. They also spend an extra 20 minutes each day in transport, and a quarter of an hour more per day just chilling.

“It’s not surprising to find that kids get fatter at a faster rate on school holidays compared to school term, and lose a lot of fitness. If kids spent the whole year on holidays, their percentage of body fat would increase by about 4% more each year than if they had no holidays, and their fitness would decline by about 10% each year.

“Kids who are not getting enough exercise and movement have a greater risk of developing health issues, such as cardiovascular disease and Type 2 diabetes later in life, so it’s important that we encourage kids to stay active and embrace a balance of downtime and exercise.”

The two-year study focused on children aged 9-10 years, with data collected at the beginning and end of Terms 1 and 4 in both Grades 4 and 5. More than 150 participants from the ‘Life on Holidays’ study took part in this study.

Co-researcher, UniSA’s Dr Dot Dumuid says that one solution could be for Australia to adopt the American institution of summer camps and holiday programs to improve kids' use of time during holidays.

“A defining factor of school holidays is that they’re unstructured – they can get food from the fridge when they want it, and generally have access to computers and devices – and there’s no doubt that screen time plays a key role in increased sedentary time during school holidays,” Dr Dumuid says.

“When you compare this to the structure of a school day, where kids have a prepared lunch, and scheduled PE lessons and playtimes, it’s vastly different.

“In contrast, summer camps and holiday programs get a big tick of approval as they provide kids with physical activities in a semi-structured way. Already popular in America, summer camps may be worth investigating as a viable option over Australian holidays.

“We all want our kids to be healthy. And while devices and TV may provide a bit of babysitting, is it really worth your child’s health?”

Notes to editors – the paper can be accessed here:

Olds, T., Dumuid, D., Eglitis, E. et al. Changes in fitness and fatness in Australian schoolchildren during the summer holidays: fitness lost, fatness regained? A cohort study. BMC Public Health 23, 2094 (2023). https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-023-17009-4

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Media Release University of South Australia, Web page
Journal/
conference:
BMC Public Health
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of South Australia, Flinders University, Murdoch Children's Research Institute (MCRI)
Funder: The life on Holidays study was funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council [grant number APP1143379] (2018–2022). The funding body played no role in the design, collection, analysis and interpretation of data or in writing the manuscript. AW is supported by NHMRC Project Grant APP143379 (2018–2022). CM is funded by a Medical Research Future Fund Investigator Grant (GNT1193862). DD is supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Early Career Fellowship APP1162166 and by the Centre of Research Excellence in Driving Global Investment in Adolescent Health funded by NHMRC APP1171981. AM is supported by the Centre of Research Excellence in Driving Global Investment in Adolescent Health funded by NHMRC APP1171981. FF is supported by an Australian Defence Science and Technology Group research grant (MyIP: 9275) and an iMOVE Australia CRC research grant (6 − 002). AM is supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) grant and the Centre of Research Excellence in Driving Global Investment in Adolescent Health funded by NHMRC APP1171981. EE is supported by an RTP grant.
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