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World Health Organization 2020 Guidelines on Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-06-24, 10:58 authored by F Bull, S Al-Ansari, SJH Biddle, Katja Borodulin, MP Buman, G Cardon, C Carty, JP Chaput, S Chastin, R Chou, PC Dempsey, L DiPietro, U Ekelund, J Firth, CM Friedenreich, LM Garcia, M Gichu, R Jago, PT Katzmarzyk, E Lambert, MF Leitzmann, K Milton, FB Ortega, C Ranasinghe, E Stamatakis, A Tiedemann, RP Troiano, HP van der Ploeg, V Wari, J Willumsen
Objectives To describe new WHO 2020 guidelines on physical activity and sedentary behaviour. Methods The guidelines were developed in accordance with WHO protocols. An expert Guideline Development Group reviewed evidence to assess associations between physical activity and sedentary behaviour for an agreed set of health outcomes and population groups. The assessment used and systematically updated recent relevant systematic reviews; new primary reviews addressed additional health outcomes or subpopulations. Results The new guidelines address children, adolescents, adults, older adults and include new specific recommendations for pregnant and postpartum women and people living with chronic conditions or disability. All adults should undertake 150-300 min of moderate-intensity, or 75-150 min of vigorous-intensity physical activity, or some equivalent combination of moderate-intensity and vigorous-intensity aerobic physical activity, per week. Among children and adolescents, an average of 60 min/day of moderate-to-vigorous intensity aerobic physical activity across the week provides health benefits. The guidelines recommend regular muscle-strengthening activity for all age groups. Additionally, reducing sedentary behaviours is recommended across all age groups and abilities, although evidence was insufficient to quantify a sedentary behaviour threshold. Conclusion These 2020 WHO guidelines update previous WHO recommendations released in 2010. They reaffirm messages that some physical activity is better than none, that more physical activity is better for optimal health outcomes and provide a new recommendation on reducing sedentary behaviours. These guidelines highlight the importance of regularly undertaking both aerobic and muscle strengthening activities and for the first time, there are specific recommendations for specific populations including for pregnant and postpartum women and people living with chronic conditions or disability. These guidelines should be used to inform national health policies aligned with the WHO Global Action Plan on Physical Activity 2018-2030 and to strengthen surveillance systems that track progress towards national and global targets.

Funding

The Public Health Agency of Canada and the Government of Norway provided financial support, without which this work could not have been completed.

History

Citation

British Journal of Sports Medicine 2020;54:1451-1462

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

British Journal of Sports Medicine

Volume

54

Pagination

1451 - 1462

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

issn

0306-3674

eissn

1473-0480

Acceptance date

2020-09-07

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-06-24

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English

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