Objective: To assess to what extent eight behavioural health risks related to
breakfast and food consumption and five behavioural health risks related to
physical activity, screen time and sleep duration are present among schoolchildren,
and to examine whether health-risk behaviours are associated with obesity.
Design: Cross-sectional design as part of the WHO European Childhood Obesity
Surveillance Initiative (school year 2007/2008). Children’s behavioural data were
reported by their parents and children’s weight and height measured by trained
fieldworkers. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were performed.
Setting: Primary schools in Bulgaria, Lithuania, Portugal and Sweden; paediatric
clinics in the Czech Republic.
Subjects: Nationally representative samples of 6–9-year-olds (n 15 643).
Results: All thirteen risk behaviours differed statistically significantly across
countries. Highest prevalence estimates of risk behaviours were observed in
Bulgaria and lowest in Sweden. Not having breakfast daily and spending screen
time ≥2 h/d were clearly positively associated with obesity. The same was true for
eating ‘foods like pizza, French fries, hamburgers, sausages or meat pies’ >3 d/week
and playing outside <1 h/d. Surprisingly, other individual unhealthy eating or less
favourable physical activity behaviours showed either no or significant negative
associations with obesity. A combination of multiple less favourable physical activity
behaviours showed positive associations with obesity, whereas multiple unhealthy
eating behaviours combined did not lead to higher odds of obesity.
Conclusions: Despite a categorization based on international health recommendations,
individual associations of the thirteen health-risk behaviours with obesity
were not consistent, whereas presence of multiple physical activity-related risk
behaviours was clearly associated with higher odds of obesity