Physical activity is one of a number of factors that influence the healthy growth and development of children.1 The value of physical activity for young children is beyond doubt, and lack of adequate physical activity is viewed as a major contributing factor to overweight and obesity, which can track into adulthood and pose many other cardiovascular and health risks.2-5
Given that early childhood is a critical period for the establishment of eating and activity behaviour,6 prevention strategies to ensure that children develop healthy physical activity behaviour should start as early in life as possible.7 Children under the age of 5 years are commonly defined as infants when aged between birth and 1 year, as toddlers when aged between 1 and 3 years, and as preschoolers when aged 3 to 5 years. In this article, we focus on these age groups, as it is in these early years that behaviour is more malleable than in later childhood. We outline the global recommendations for physical activity for children, and the implications of these recommendations when we consider current data on preschooler physical activity in Australia. We also aim to clearly identify gaps in the literature around this topic and to suggest recommendations for future research and public health policy.
A search using search engines Google and Google Scholar was conducted in June 2011. We also conducted a multidatabase search using EBSCOhost (http://www.ebscohost.com/) to retrieve journal articles that have cited physical activity recommendations or guidelines in children aged ≤ 5 years. Most guidelines/recommendations were retrieved from government or organisational websites. These are summarised in Box 1 and described in more detail online in Box 2 (http://mja.com.au/10.5694/mja11.11015). Note that the words “recommendation” and “guideline” have been used interchangeably in reference to the appropriate dose–response of physical activity to yield health benefits in children. The original term used in its exact wording for each country or organisation is given in Box 2 online (http://mja.com.au/10.56941/mja11.11015). To our knowledge, the countries listed are the only countries with national guidelines or recommendations for physical activity that include children ≤ 5 years of age. In addition, our review includes guidelines that mentioned this age group when developing guidelines for older children or that considered preschoolers in their proposals for future recommendations. We also consider guidelines or recommendations provided by the World Health Organization,15 and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention19 and the National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE)8in the United States.
The Australian guidelines11 and recently released United Kingdom guidelines9 are, to our knowledge, the only government-endorsed guidelines that have provided recommendations in age-appropriate categories. Ireland has grouped together children aged 2–18 years, recommending that children in this age range should be active at a moderate-to-vigorous level for at least 60 minutes every day.10 However, current UK-wide physical activity guidelines for children aged ≤ 5 years, which model those from Australia, recommend that preschoolers be physically active every day for at least 3 hours, spread throughout the day. This activity should include both structured and unstructured free play.9 We argue that age groupings are needed because toddlers and preschoolers, school-aged children and adolescents are physiologically and developmentally different from each other. These developmental differences need to inform age-specific recommendations.
NASPE has also released specific guidelines for preschoolers,8 recommending 60 minutes of structured physical activity and up to several hours of unstructured play for this age group. These have served as the unofficial national guidelines for the US and other global populations, particularly for academics and researchers in the field (Box 2 online) http://mja.com.au/10.56941/mja11.11015. The Institute of Medicine (IOM), an independent organisation in the US, has also released recommendations that toddlers and preschoolers should be physically active for 15 minutes each waking hour (given a 12-hour waking day, this equals around 3 hours of physical activity per day). The IOM guidelines also specify that childcare facilities should ensure that children are active for at least a quarter of the time they spend in the facility.20
It is apparent from these guidelines that although researchers are beginning to focus on early childhood, many policymakers are yet to develop guidelines specific to preschool children. This may be due to the lack of literature on the relationship between physical activity and health status in preschool children, as a result of which dose–responses of physical activity for health benefits are difficult to establish.13
There is also a lack of consensus on the recommended duration of physical activity for preschool children. While most national and global guidelines recommend 60 minutes of physical activity (light-to-vigorous intensity) per day for all children, including preschoolers, the guidelines endorsed by NASPE and the Australian and UK governments recommend much more — ≥ 2 hours (NASPE) and ≥ 3 hours (Australia and the UK). This, too, is most likely due to the lack of evidence-based literature, particularly in relation to how much physical activity is required for positive health outcomes in childhood and later adulthood. The development of guidelines for children has thus relied heavily on expert opinion and extrapolation from knowledge about adults. It is also important to note that the intensity of physical activity required in this age group is unclear. Current recommendations therefore include all daily movements, which aligns with young children’s natural inclinations to be active in intermittent bouts.21
Clearly, most current guidelines include an estimated time that children should engage in all types of physical activity (light-to-vigorous intensity). However, some guidelines, such as those of Ireland, are only specific to moderate-to-vigorous activity. Objective monitoring (ie, accelerometry) is considered to be the gold standard when measuring for physical activity.22 Yet the selection of cut-off points to quantify different intensities of physical activity remains inconsistent across studies.22 Further research is needed to develop an accurate understanding of what intensity and amount of physical activity is required for positive health outcomes in young children.
In a recent study of 427 Australian children aged 3–5 years, less than 17% of waking time was spent being physically active (light-to-vigorous intensity). This translates into about 36 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and 110–120 minutes of light-to-vigorous activity within a 12-hour day.23 In another study of 30 children aged 3–5 years, the children were physically active for about 158 minutes per day according to parent reports, with accelerometry indicating an average 34 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous activity per day,24 which is also below the Australian recommendation of at least 3 hours per day.9 To our knowledge, only one Australian study evaluated Australian children’s physical activity against the national recommendation.25 It reported that 55.7% and 79.0% of a sample of 266 preschool children were physically active for ≥ 3 hours on weekdays and weekend days, respectively, based on parental reports.
We also have cross-sectional data on 220 preschool children (mean age, 3.62 years; SD, 0.76; 106 boys) and report both the average time in light-to-vigorous activity and the percentage of compliance to guidelines. Our sample was recruited from metropolitan Melbourne and Sydney and regional Victoria and New South Wales. We found, using parent proxy report26 for all children, and accelerometry in a subsample of 76 children, that the children undertook an average of 154 minutes (SD, 71; range, 26–370 minutes) of activity per day. Only 32.3% of preschoolers met the guideline of ≥ 3 hours per day of physical activity.26
Despite recent literature on Australian preschoolers, it is difficult to ascertain their level of physical activity and whether they are sufficiently active. There are a number of methodological factors influencing our interpretation of physical activity patterns in the preschool years. These include (i) the application of different measurement instruments (parent report versus accelerometer, and inconsistency between cut-off points of intensity); (ii) the reporting of different indices of physical activity (percentages versus averages, and minutes per hour compared with minutes per day); and (iii) the use of different benchmark guidelines. For example, if we use a cut-off of 60 minutes or 2 hours, then 93.6% and 63.2% of our sample, respectively, would meet the guidelines. In other words, if our children lived in Ireland, the Nordic countries, Singapore or the US, most would be deemed sufficiently active.
Clearly, we are a long way from forming universal or comparable guidelines for preschool children. In order to compare trends across countries, and to harmonise data collection internationally, empirically supported physical activity guidelines to examine whether children are sufficiently active need to be developed. These guidelines can then be used to summarise what is known about appropriate levels of physical activity in children and to disseminate this knowledge to health professionals so they can help parents attain and maintain regular physical activity in their children’s lives. A recent study highlighted that knowledge of physical activity guidelines is associated with adherence to the guidelines for children aged 11–15 years, and that educating parents and children about physical activity guidelines may be beneficial, in particular for families of lower socioeconomic status backgrounds.27 Nonetheless, the barriers to developing evidence-based guidelines include methodological issues (such as the application of different measurement instruments), a lack of evidence for the dose–response required for a positive health outcome, and limitations in representative surveys of physical activity in healthy young children.
Future research should focus on how best to examine physical activity reliably in preschool children and how to determine optimal levels of daily physical activity to foster the health and wellbeing of young children. If there are social and cultural factors that influence these optimal levels, these need to be evaluated systematically and rigorously to provide evidence-based recommendations that can then be endorsed by health professionals and early childhood educators and carers across countries, not just within a country. Research questions should focus on optimal dose–responses for health outcomes in overweight or obese preschool children, in particular for maintaining a healthy weight. First, however, epidemiological population survey studies with large samples of healthy children are needed to assess children’s natural inclination for activity, which in turn may serve as a benchmark for the development of dose–responses. These studies will need to consider methodological issues of measuring physical activity in children. Without this information base, interventions designed to address childhood obesity and related health outcomes by encouraging recommended levels of physical activity during the formative preschool years will continue to be limited.
1 Summary of physical activity guidelines/recommendations for children, by country/major health organisation*
Guidelines/recommendations endorsed specifically for preschoolers:
United States (guideline): preschoolers should accumulate at least 60 minutes of structured physical activity each day and up to several hours of unstructured physical activity each day, and should not be sedentary for more than 60 minutes at a time, except when sleeping.8
United Kingdom (recommendation): Children of preschool age who are capable of walking unaided should be physically active (light-to-vigorous) daily for at least 3 hours, spread throughout the day.9
Ireland (guideline): all children and young people should be active, at a moderate-to-vigorous level, for at least 60 minutes every day.10
Australia (recommendation): toddlers (1–3 years) and preschoolers (3–5 years) should be physically active (light-to-vigorous intensity) every day for at least 3 hours, spread throughout the day.11
Guidelines endorsed for all children:
Singapore: accumulate 60 minutes or more moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per day. Build up the 60 minutes with short bouts of 10–15 minutes of physical activity throughout the day. Future national physical activity guidelines (currently in draft) will provide practical guidance for various age groups (including infant to 6 years of age).12
Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden: main target — an increase in the number of children and youths who are physically active for at least 60 minutes per day.13
Guidelines/recommendations for preschoolers still under consideration:
Finland, Austria, and Sweden are in the process of establishing new national recommendations.13
Japan: the education ministry plans to draw up guidelines during the 2011–12 financial year specifying the optimal amount and kind of physical activity preschoolers should be getting.14
Guidelines/recommendations for children that do not specifically include preschoolers:
World Health Organization (recommendations): children aged 5–17 years.15
US (guidelines): children aged 6–17 years.16
Canada (guidelines): children aged 5–11 years.17
New Zealand (guidelines): children and young people aged 5–18 years.18
* For further details, see Box 2 (http://mja.com.au/10.5694/mja11.11015).
2 Details of physical activity guidelines/recommendations for children, by country/major health organisation
CDC = Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. NASPE = National Association for Sport and Physical Education. WHO = World Health Organization. * Although NASPE is an independent organisation, their guidelines have unofficially become the US guidelines for physical activity (with much overlap with the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans16,17 especially for researchers and academics in the field). † Health Promotion Board. HPB’s key youth health messages. http://www.hpb.gov.sg/uploadedFiles/HPB_Online/Programmes/YHPG%20Funding%20Guidelines%20-%20Annex%20A%20(April%202011).pdf (accessed Jun 2011). ‡ American Academy of Pediatrics. Bright futures: guidelines for health supervision of infants, children, and adolescents. Promoting physical activity. http://brightfutures.aap.org/pdfs/Guidelines_PDF/7-Promoting_Physical_Activity.pdf (accessed Jun 2011). § Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology. Canadian sedentary behavior guidelines. For children 5–11 years. http://www.csep.ca/CMFiles/Guidelines/SBGuidelinesChildandYouth_E.pdf (accessed Jun 2011).
Provenance: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
- Helen Skouteris1
- Daniela Dell'Aquila1
- Louise A Baur2
- Genevieve M Dwyer2
- Marita P McCabe1
- Lina A Ricciardelli1
- Matthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz1
- 1 School of Psychology, Deakin University, Melbourne, VIC.
- 2 Discipline of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW.
No relevant disclosures.
- 1. Hills AP, King NA, Armstrong TP. The contribution of physical activity and sedentary behaviour to the growth and development of children and adolescents: Implications for overweight and obesity. Sports Med 2007; 37: 533-545.
- 2. Janssen I, LeBlanc AG. Systematic review of the health benefits of physical activity and fitness in school-aged children and youth. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act 2010; 7: 40.
- 3. Torrance B, McGuire AK, Lewanczuk R, et al. Overweight, physical activity and high blood pressure in children: a review of the literature. Vasc Health Risk Manag 2007; 3: 139-149.
- 4. Biddle SJH, Asare M. Physical activity and mental health in children and adolescents: a review of reviews. Br J Sports Med 2011; 45: 886-895.
- 5. Singh AS, Mulder C, Twisk JWR, et al. Tracking of childhood overweight into adulthood: a systematic review of the literature. Obes Rev 2008; 9: 474-488.
- 6. Trost SG, Sirard JR, Dowda M, et al. Physical activity in overweight and nonoverweight preschool children. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 2003; 27: 834-839.
- 7. Reilly JJ. Physical activity in early childhood: topic commentary. In: Encyclopedia on early childhood development. Montreal: Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood Development, 2011. http://www.child-encyclopedia.com/documents/ReillyANGxp1-Physical.pdf (accessed Apr 2011).
- 8. National Association for Sport and Physical Education. Active start: a statement of physical activity guidelines for children from birth to age 5, 2nd edition. http://www.aahperd.org/naspe/standards/nationalGuidelines/ActiveStart.cfm (accessed Mar 2011).
- 9. Department of Health. UK physical activity guidelines. http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_127931 (accessed Jul 2011).
- 10. Get Ireland Active. Children and young adults: guidelines for children and young people (aged 2–18). http://www.getirelandactive.ie/get-the-guidlines/children-and-young-adults/ (accessed Mar 2011).
- 11. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Physical activity guidelines. http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/health-pubhlth-strateg-phys-act-guidelines#rec_0_5 (accessed Mar 2011).
- 12. Health Promotion Board. National Healthy Lifestyle Campaign 2010. http://hpb.gov.sg/uploadedFiles/HPB_Online/News_and_Events/News/2010/NHLC2010AnnexeE.pdf (accessed Jun 2011).
- 13. Becker W, Lyhne N, Pederson A, et al. Nordic Nutrition Recommendations 2004 — integrating nutrition and physical activity. Scand J Nutr 2004; 48: 178-187.
- 14. Yomiuri Shimbun. Ministry to set exercise guidelines for preschoolers. Daily Yomiuri Online 2011; 6 Jan. http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/T110105003528.html (accessed May 2011).
- 15. World Health Organization. Global recommendations on physical activity for health. Geneva: WHO, 2010. http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2010/9789241599979_eng.pdf (accessed Mar 2011).
- 16. US Department of Health and Human Services. Physical activity guidelines for Americans. Chapter 3: Active children and adolescents. http://www.health.gov/PAGuidelines/guidelines/chapter3.aspx (accessed Apr 2011).
- 17. Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology. Canadian physical activity guidelines. Ottawa: CSEP, 2011. http://www.csep.ca/CMFiles/Guidelines/CanadianPhysical ActivityGuidelinesStatements_E.pdf (accessed May 2011).
- 18. Sport and Recreation New Zealand. Physical activity guidelines for children and young people (5–18 years old). http://www.sparc.org.nz/en-nz/young-people/Activity-Guidelines-5-18-Years/ (accessed Jan 2012).
- 19. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Physical activity for everyone: How much physical activity do children need? http://www.cdc.gov/physicalactivity/everyone/guidelines/children.html (accessed Apr 2011).
- 20. Early Childhood Obesity Prevention Policies Committee on Obesity Prevention Policies for Young Children. Physical activity. In: Birch LL, Parker L, Burns A, editors. Early childhood obesity prevention policies. Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2011.
- 21. Cliff DP, Janssen X. Levels of habitual physical activity in early childhood. In: Encyclopedia on early childhood development. Montreal: Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood Development, 2011. http://www.child-encyclopedia.com/documents/Cliff-JanssenANGxp1.pdf (accessed Apr 2011).
- 22. Beets MW, Bornstein D, Dowda M, Pate RR. Compliance with national guidelines for physical activity in US preschoolers: measurement and interpretation. Pediatrics 2011; 127: 658-664.
- 23. Hinkley T, Salmon J, Hesketh K, et al. Characterising preschool children’s physical activity: the HAPPY study [abstract]. J Sci Med Sport 2010; 12: e169.
- 24. Wen LM, Van der Ploeg HP, Kite J, et al. A validation study of assessing physical activity and sedentary behaviour in children aged 3–5 years. Pediatr Exerc Sci 2010; 22: 408-420.
- 25. Okley AD, Trost SG, Steele JR, et al. Adherence to physical and electronic media guidelines in Australian pre-school children. J Paediatr Child Health 2009; 45: 5-8.
- 26. Dwyer GM, Hardy LL, Peat JK, Baur LA. The validity and reliability of a home environment preschool-age physical activity questionnaire (Pre-PAQ). Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act 2011; 8: 86.
- 27. Roth M, Stamatakis E. Linking young people’s knowledge of public health guidelines to physical activity levels in England. Pediatr Exerc Sci 2010; 22: 467-476.
Abstract