HALO Scientist Dr. Jean-Philippe Chaput and HALO Director Dr. Mark Tremblay are among the authors on a paper, “Human development index, children’s health-related quality of life and movement behaviors: a compositional data analysis,” that was recently published in Quality of Life Research. Citation details and a summary of the paper are below.

Dumuid D, Maher C, Lewis LK, Stanford TE, Martín Fernández JA, Ratcliffe J, Katzmarzyk PT, Barreira TV, Chaput JP, Fogelholm M, Hu G, Maia J, Sarmiento OL, Standage M, Tremblay MS, Tudor-Locke C, Olds T. Human development index, children’s health-related quality of life and movement behaviors: a compositional data analysis. Qual Life Res. 2018 Jun;27(6):1473-1482.
 

Abstract

PURPOSE: Health-related quality of life has been related to physical activity, sedentary behavior, and sleep among children from developed nations. These relationships have rarely been assessed in developing nations, nor have behaviors been considered in their true context, as mutually exclusive and exhaustive parts of the movement behavior composition. This study aimed to explore whether children’s health-related quality of life is related to their movement behavior composition and if the relationship differs according to human development index. METHODS: Children aged 9-11 years (n = 5855), from the 12-nation cross-sectional observational International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment 2011-2013, self-reported their health-related quality of life (KIDSCREEN-10). Daily movement behaviors were from 24-h, 7-day accelerometry. Isometric log-ratio mixed-effect linear models were used to calculate estimates for difference in health-related quality of life for the reallocation of time between daily movement behaviors. RESULTS: Children from countries of higher human development index reported stronger positive relationships between health-related quality of life and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, relative to the remaining behaviors (r = 0.75, p = 0.005) than those from lower human development index countries. In the very high human development index strata alone, health-related quality of life was significantly related to the movement behavior composition (p = 0.005), with moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (relative to remaining behaviors) being positively associated with health-related quality of life. CONCLUSIONS: The relationship between children’s health-related quality of life and their movement behaviors is moderated by their country’s human development index. This should be considered when 24-h movement behavior guidelines are developed for children around the world.