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Health behaviours of 17- to 19-year olds in North East England: assessing adherence to current recommendations for young people at the adolescent-adult boundary.

Basterfield, L; Rowland, M; Rigg, R; Reilly, J J; Janssen, X; Pearce, M S; Evans, E H; Adamson, A J

Health behaviours of 17- to 19-year olds in North East England: assessing adherence to current recommendations for young people at the adolescent-adult boundary. Thumbnail


Authors

L Basterfield

M Rowland

R Rigg

J J Reilly

X Janssen

M S Pearce

A J Adamson



Abstract

Aims: Late adolescence/young adulthood represents a transition to independence, with increasing control over health behaviours (hB). however, hB data of late adolescents are often reported in wide and inconsistent age brackets, making comparisons with age-targeted guidelines difficult. We aimed to characterise important hB (body composition, physical activity (pA), diet) of late adolescents from North east england. Methods: A total of 145 17- to 19-year olds from the Gateshead Millennium Study birth cohort participated in 2017 to 2018. Measurements including height, weight, body fat, accelerometer-measured pA and sedentary behaviour, and 24-hour dietary recall were taken. Comparisons with current global age-appropriate recommendations were made for four variables: (1) 60 min moderate-vigorous intensity pA (MVpA)/day (age 17 years old) or 150 min MVpA/week (18- to 19-years old); (2) body fat (<25% for males, <30% for females); (3) free sugars <5% total energy intake; (4) five portions fruit and/or vegetables/day. Results: Most recommendations were not met: MVpA averaged 37 min/day, 20% of 17-year olds met 60 min/d, and 55% of 18- to 19-year olds met 150 min/week. About 26.5% of participants had excess body fat. Daily fruit/ vegetable consumption was 2.7 portions; 12% consumed ‘5-a-day’ portions of fruit and/or vegetables, 13.5% consumed <5% energy from free sugars. together, 43% of participants met 0/4, 44% met 1/4%, and 0% met 4/4 ageappropriate health recommendations. Conclusion: these novel empirical data reveal concerning hB in this population of late adolescents, suggesting targeted health messaging to improve hB is needed.

Citation

Basterfield, L., Rowland, M., Rigg, R., Reilly, J. J., Janssen, X., Pearce, M. S., Evans, E. H., & Adamson, A. J. (online). Health behaviours of 17- to 19-year olds in North East England: assessing adherence to current recommendations for young people at the adolescent-adult boundary. Perspectives in Public Health, Article 17579139241308824. https://doi.org/10.1177/17579139241308824

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 4, 2025
Online Publication Date Jan 29, 2025
Deposit Date Mar 24, 2025
Publicly Available Date Mar 24, 2025
Journal Perspectives in Public Health
Print ISSN 1757-9139
Electronic ISSN 1757-9147
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Article Number 17579139241308824
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/17579139241308824
Keywords physical activity, public health, obesity
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3714754

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