Toronto Star

Canadian kids lag in physical activity report

Too much screen time among reasons given for poor showing

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

Canadian kids continue to rank low in a global report on physical activity.

The most recent release from the Active Healthy Kids Global Alliance finds children in Slovenia and Japan to be the most active among 49 countries studied.

Canada scored D+ in categories that measure overall physical activity and sedentary behaviour, and a D in the newest indicator, physical fitness.

The Canadian data was drawn from the ParticipAc­tion Report Card on Physical Activity for Children and Youth released in June.

That report gave Canadian kids a D+ for overall physical activity, up slightly from D- in 2016. The global report blames Canada’s dismal showing on too much screen time, the urbanizati­on of communitie­s and increasing automation of domestic chores.

It says countries with the most active children and youth foster physical activity by “pervasive cultural and social norms.”

Slovenia integrates sport with national identity and regularly measures the physical fitness of children 6 to 19 years old. It scored a top grade of A- for overall physical activity, a B+ for family and peers and an A for government, which evaluates strategy and resources.

Meanwhile, Japan has a highly establishe­d walking-to-school policy and earned an A- for active transporta­tion and an A for physical fitness.

Alliance president and Ottawa physician Dr. Mark Tremblay says activity levels overall are too low, and deemed it “a global childhood inactivity epidemic.”

He acknowledg­ed that data provided by participat­ing countries is inconsiste­nt, with many in the current study supplying incomplete informatio­n.

But he was buoyed by the addition of 15 countries to the study, including several in South America. He says four countries from the previous study in 2016 dropped out of the survey.

Tremblay, also a researcher with the ParticipAc­tion survey, says Canada can improve its ranking by encouragin­g kids to walk, bike or wheel to school, and better managing screen time. In the ParticipAc­tion report, just 35 per cent of kids age 5 to 17, and 62 per cent of kids age 3 to 4 were found to get the exercise they need, while 51 per cent engage in more recreation­al screen time than is recommende­d.

 ?? AARON MARINEAU THE HUTCHINSON NEWS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A recent report gave Canadian kids a D+ for overall physical activity, up slightly from D- in 2016.
AARON MARINEAU THE HUTCHINSON NEWS VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A recent report gave Canadian kids a D+ for overall physical activity, up slightly from D- in 2016.

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