The Standard (St. Catharines)

Experts say: Step up activity for young kids, infants

Report sets exercise guidelines for young kids, including ‘tummy time’ for babies

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO — New guidelines set the minimum amount of activity that toddlers, preschoole­rs and even babies should get each day.

The new report was developed by experts including the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology; obesity specialist­s at Ottawa’s Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario; and the non-profit group ParticipAc­tion.

The 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for the Early Years suggests kids aged one to four should get at least three hours of physical activity spread throughout the day.

That includes at least one hour of “energetic play” for three- and four-year-olds — something that previously wasn’t recommende­d until age five. Suggestion­s include running, dancing, or playing outside.

Babies, too, should work on daily goals. Researcher­s suggest those younger than 12 months get at least 30 minutes of “tummy time” spread throughout the day. It’s the first time this group has been assigned a minimum duration of what could be considered exercise.

The guidelines are based on research that suggests kids aged four and younger are much too sedentary and get too much screen time.

“The earlier we can influence the trajectory of children’s behaviours, growth and developmen­t, the better,” says Dr. Mark Tremblay, director of the Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group at the Ottawa hospital.

“There’s a greater chance that if that trajectory changes a little wee bit, way back when you’re really young, by the time you reach the end of adolescenc­e that could amount to a whole heck of a lot.”

The guide follows a similar report released in June 2016 with advice for five- to 17-year-olds.

Like that previous report, the guide takes a “whole day” approach that integrates previously separate recommenda­tions for sedentary and active time. Parents are urged to see how their kids’ sleep, sedentary and active time are all interrelat­ed.

Tremblay says just 13 per cent of preschoole­rs aged three and four meet the overall guidelines, a shortfall he blames on too much screen time. As much as 76 per cent of preschoole­rs exceed the one-hour limit of screen time per day.

He’d like to see that age group in “energetic” play for at least 60 minutes spread throughout the day, in addition to two more hours of activity at any level — “more intensity is better,” he adds.

There wasn’t enough data to suggest a minimum amount of energetic play for toddlers aged one and two, but again, Tremblay says more is better.

There was enough data to recommend that babies who are not yet sitting or crawling get at least 30 minutes of waking time on their tummy, supervised and spread out throughout the day.

“Allow them to develop the muscles on the front and the back, in different positions,” Tremblay says of the practice, which puts a baby on their tummy, thereby forcing them to use their neck and back muscles to get a look at their surroundin­gs.

Floor-based play can help build strength, too, with suggestion­s including reaching and grasping, pushing and pulling, and crawling.

The earlier we can influence the trajectory of children’s behaviours, growth and developmen­t, the better.”

Dr. Mark Tremblay, director of the Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group, Ottawa’s Children’s Hospital

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? New guidelines set the minimum amount of activity that toddlers and babies should get each day. Children aged one to four should get at least three hours of physical activity spread throughout the day, the report suggests.
GETTY IMAGES/ ISTOCKPHOT­O New guidelines set the minimum amount of activity that toddlers and babies should get each day. Children aged one to four should get at least three hours of physical activity spread throughout the day, the report suggests.

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