Assessment of physical activity among rural Senegalese adolescent girls: Influence of age, sexual maturation, and body composition

Citation
E. Benefice et al., Assessment of physical activity among rural Senegalese adolescent girls: Influence of age, sexual maturation, and body composition, J ADOLES H, 28(4), 2001, pp. 319-327
Citations number
41
Categorie Soggetti
Public Health & Health Care Science",Pediatrics
Journal title
JOURNAL OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH
ISSN journal
1054139X → ACNP
Volume
28
Issue
4
Year of publication
2001
Pages
319 - 327
Database
ISI
SICI code
1054-139X(200104)28:4<319:AOPAAR>2.0.ZU;2-#
Abstract
Purpose: To analyze the level of habitual physical activity and its relatio nship with age, maturational stage, and growth status in a group of adolesc ent Senegalese girls. Methods: Physical activity was assessed for 3 consecutive years in a sample of 40 girls of rural origin. They were 13.3 +/- 0.5 years old at the begin ning of the study and belonged to a Sereer community located in the center of Senegal. Minute-by-minute movement counts using accelerometers enabled q uantification of levels of physical activity. The assessment was performed during a 4-day period in the first round (1997) and during a 3-day period i n 1998 and 1999. Half of the girls were not yet pubescent during the first round, and the whole sample displayed growth retardation in weight and stat ure, compared with the World Health Organization/National Center for Health Statistics reference. Results: Estimated levels of activity were high, ranging from 1.80 to 1.85 multiples of basal metabolic rate. There was a clear decline in the activit y level during the course of study. Schoolgirls were less active than the o thers. Mature adolescents showed more activity during the night. A weak, bu t significant and positive correlation existed between body mass index and activity during the day; during the night, there was a positive correlation with fat and lean body mass. Conclusion: Factors determining the activity level were intricate but great er maturity and better nutritional status appeared to be positively related to the activity level. (C) Society for Adolescent Medicine, 2001.