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@article{ López-Fernández2021,
 title = {No changes in adolescent’s sedentary behaviour across Europe between 2002 and 2017},
 author = {López-Fernández, J. and López-Valenciano, A. and Mayo, X. and Liguori, G. and Lamb, M. A. and Copeland, R. J. and Jiménez, A.},
 journal = {BMC Public Health},
 pages = {1-8},
 volume = {21},
 year = {2021},
 issn = {1471-2458},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10860-3},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-78725-5},
 abstract = {Background: Public health organizations have been alerted to the high levels of sedentary behaviour (SB) among
adolescents as well as to the health and social consequences of excess sedentary time. However, SB changes of the
European Union (EU) adolescents over time have not been reported yet. This study aimed to identify SB of the EU
adolescents (15–17 years) in four-time points (2002, 2005, 2013 and 2017) and to analyse the prevalence of SB
according to the sex.
Methods: SB of 2542 adolescents (1335 boys and 1207 girls) as a whole sample and country-by-country was
analysed in 2002, 2005, 2013, and 2017 using the Sport and Physical Activity EU Special Eurobarometers’ data. SB
was measured using the sitting time question from the short version of the International Physical Activity
Questionnaire (IPAQ), such that 4h30min of daily sitting time was the delineating point to determine excess SB
behaviour (≥4h30min of sitting time) or not (≤4h30min of sitting time). A χ2 test was used to compare the
prevalence of SB between survey years. Furthermore, SB prevalence between sexes was analysed using a Z-Score
test for two population proportions.
Results: The prevalence of SB among EU adolescents across each of the four survey years ranged from 74.2 and 76.8%,
rates that are considered high. High levels of SB were also displayed by both sexes (girls: 76.8 to 81.2%; boys: 71.7 to
76.7%). No significant differences in the prevalence of SB among years (p > 0.05) were found for the whole sample, and
for either girls or boys. Also, no significant differences in the prevalence of SB between girls and boys were found.
Conclusion: The SB prevalence in European adolescents is extremely high (76.8% in 2017) with no differences
between girls and boys. No significant improvements have been seen between 2002 and 2017. Eurobarometer should
increase the adolescents’ sample to make possible benchmarking comparisons among the EU countries and extend
the survey to the younger children population.},
 keywords = {gesundheitliche Folgen; health consequences; körperliche Bewegung; physical exercise; Jugendlicher; adolescent; Europa; Europe; EU; EU; nationale Politik; national politics; Jugend; youth; Gesundheitsverhalten; health behavior; Eurobarometer; Eurobarometer}}