Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey

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Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey. / Lochte, Lene; Petersen, Poul Erik; Nielsen, Kim G; Andersen, Anette; Platts-Mills, Thomas A. E.

In: Asthma Research and Practice, Vol. 4, 6, 2018, p. 1-8.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Lochte, L, Petersen, PE, Nielsen, KG, Andersen, A & Platts-Mills, TAE 2018, 'Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey', Asthma Research and Practice, vol. 4, 6, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9

APA

Lochte, L., Petersen, P. E., Nielsen, K. G., Andersen, A., & Platts-Mills, T. A. E. (2018). Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey. Asthma Research and Practice, 4, 1-8. [6]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9

Vancouver

Lochte L, Petersen PE, Nielsen KG, Andersen A, Platts-Mills TAE. Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey. Asthma Research and Practice. 2018;4:1-8. 6. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9

Author

Lochte, Lene ; Petersen, Poul Erik ; Nielsen, Kim G ; Andersen, Anette ; Platts-Mills, Thomas A. E. / Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey. In: Asthma Research and Practice. 2018 ; Vol. 4. pp. 1-8.

Bibtex

@article{65e461bf301640d59b62df2e5d33cc4d,
title = "Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey",
abstract = "Background: Asthma in paediatric populations is one of the highest public health concerns. In this study of children and adolescents, we hypothesized that low levels of physical activity (PA) would show associations with asthma that vary by asthma outcome. The objective was to assess whether PA was associated with ever asthma and/or current asthma.Methods: Analyses were based on 4824 Danish schoolchildren aged 11-15 years old (48.7% boys) participating in the HBSC survey. The study variables were (1) physician-diagnosed asthma (ever asthma) and (2) physician-diagnosed asthma plus wheezing and/or physician or hospital consultation for wheezing (current asthma). Associations with PA by gender were analysed with multivariate logistic regression using the {"}variance covariance (vce) cluster{"} method.Results: The prevalence of ever asthma was 14.3% (boys) and 12.8% (girls), and that of current asthma was 6.8% (boys) and 7.0% (girls). Boys with current asthma showed important differences in low and high PA. We found inverse associations between low PA and ever asthma, odds ratio [95% confidence interval] male: .55 [.30; .99] and female: .47 [.24; .93], and current asthma, male: .27 [.12; .60] (P linear trend = .007) and female: .32 [.11; .94].Conclusions: The lowest activity levels showed significant inverse associations with asthma, regardless of the definition. For boys, the more stringent (current asthma) of the two paediatric asthma definitions revealed a significant trend with PA, and the direction of associations shifted to positive as weekly PA increased.",
author = "Lene Lochte and Petersen, {Poul Erik} and Nielsen, {Kim G} and Anette Andersen and Platts-Mills, {Thomas A. E.}",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "1--8",
journal = "Asthma Research and Practice",
issn = "2054-7064",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Associations of physical activity with childhood asthma, a population study based on the WHO - health behaviour in school-aged children survey

AU - Lochte, Lene

AU - Petersen, Poul Erik

AU - Nielsen, Kim G

AU - Andersen, Anette

AU - Platts-Mills, Thomas A. E.

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Background: Asthma in paediatric populations is one of the highest public health concerns. In this study of children and adolescents, we hypothesized that low levels of physical activity (PA) would show associations with asthma that vary by asthma outcome. The objective was to assess whether PA was associated with ever asthma and/or current asthma.Methods: Analyses were based on 4824 Danish schoolchildren aged 11-15 years old (48.7% boys) participating in the HBSC survey. The study variables were (1) physician-diagnosed asthma (ever asthma) and (2) physician-diagnosed asthma plus wheezing and/or physician or hospital consultation for wheezing (current asthma). Associations with PA by gender were analysed with multivariate logistic regression using the "variance covariance (vce) cluster" method.Results: The prevalence of ever asthma was 14.3% (boys) and 12.8% (girls), and that of current asthma was 6.8% (boys) and 7.0% (girls). Boys with current asthma showed important differences in low and high PA. We found inverse associations between low PA and ever asthma, odds ratio [95% confidence interval] male: .55 [.30; .99] and female: .47 [.24; .93], and current asthma, male: .27 [.12; .60] (P linear trend = .007) and female: .32 [.11; .94].Conclusions: The lowest activity levels showed significant inverse associations with asthma, regardless of the definition. For boys, the more stringent (current asthma) of the two paediatric asthma definitions revealed a significant trend with PA, and the direction of associations shifted to positive as weekly PA increased.

AB - Background: Asthma in paediatric populations is one of the highest public health concerns. In this study of children and adolescents, we hypothesized that low levels of physical activity (PA) would show associations with asthma that vary by asthma outcome. The objective was to assess whether PA was associated with ever asthma and/or current asthma.Methods: Analyses were based on 4824 Danish schoolchildren aged 11-15 years old (48.7% boys) participating in the HBSC survey. The study variables were (1) physician-diagnosed asthma (ever asthma) and (2) physician-diagnosed asthma plus wheezing and/or physician or hospital consultation for wheezing (current asthma). Associations with PA by gender were analysed with multivariate logistic regression using the "variance covariance (vce) cluster" method.Results: The prevalence of ever asthma was 14.3% (boys) and 12.8% (girls), and that of current asthma was 6.8% (boys) and 7.0% (girls). Boys with current asthma showed important differences in low and high PA. We found inverse associations between low PA and ever asthma, odds ratio [95% confidence interval] male: .55 [.30; .99] and female: .47 [.24; .93], and current asthma, male: .27 [.12; .60] (P linear trend = .007) and female: .32 [.11; .94].Conclusions: The lowest activity levels showed significant inverse associations with asthma, regardless of the definition. For boys, the more stringent (current asthma) of the two paediatric asthma definitions revealed a significant trend with PA, and the direction of associations shifted to positive as weekly PA increased.

U2 - 10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9

DO - 10.1186/s40733-018-0042-9

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 29736253

VL - 4

SP - 1

EP - 8

JO - Asthma Research and Practice

JF - Asthma Research and Practice

SN - 2054-7064

M1 - 6

ER -

ID: 196347105