Ghent University, Department of Movement and Sports Sciences, Watersportlaan 2, Gent, 9000, Belgium.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2007 Nov 9;4:55. doi: 10.1186/1479-5868-4-55.
Although it is important to investigate how interventions work, no formal mediation analyses have been conducted to explain behavioral outcomes in school-based fat intake interventions in adolescents. The aim of the present study was to examine mediation effects of changes in psychosocial determinants of dietary fat intake (attitude, social support, self-efficacy, perceived benefits and barriers) on changes in fat intake in adolescent girls.
Data from a 1-year prospective intervention study were used. A random sample of 804 adolescent girls was included in the study. Girls in the intervention group (n = 415) were exposed to a multi-component school-based intervention program, combining environmental changes with a computer tailored fat intake intervention and parental support. Fat intake and psychosocial determinants of fat intake were measured with validated self-administered questionnaires. To assess mediating effects, a product-of-coefficient test, appropriate for cluster randomized controlled trials, was used.
None of the examined psychosocial factors showed a reliable mediating effect on changes in fat intake. The single-mediator model revealed a statistically significant suppression effect of perceived barriers on changes in fat intake (p = 0.011). In the multiple-mediator model, this effect was no longer significant, which was most likely due to changes in perceived barriers being moderately related to changes in self-efficacy (-0.30) and attitude (-0.25). The overall mediated-suppressed effect of the examined psychosocial factors was virtually zero (total mediated effect = 0.001; SE = 7.22; p = 0.992).
Given the lack of intervention effects on attitudes, social support, self-efficacy and perceived benefits and barriers, it is suggested that future interventions should focus on the identification of effective strategies for changing these theoretical mediators in the desired direction. Alternatively, it could be argued that these constructs need not be targeted in interventions aimed at adolescents, as they may not be responsible for the intervention effects on fat intake. To draw any conclusions regarding mediators of fat-intake change in adolescent' girls and regarding optimal future intervention strategies, more systematic research on the mediating properties of psychosocial variables is needed.
虽然研究干预措施的作用机制很重要,但目前尚未对基于学校的青少年脂肪摄入量干预措施中行为结果的中介效应进行正式分析。本研究旨在检验青少年女性脂肪摄入量变化的心理社会决定因素(态度、社会支持、自我效能、感知益处和障碍)变化对脂肪摄入量变化的中介效应。
本研究使用了一项为期 1 年的前瞻性干预研究的数据。研究纳入了一个随机样本的 804 名青春期女孩。干预组(n=415)的女孩接受了一种多组分的基于学校的干预计划,该计划将环境变化与基于计算机的脂肪摄入量干预和家长支持相结合。脂肪摄入量和脂肪摄入量的心理社会决定因素通过验证过的自我管理问卷进行测量。为了评估中介效应,使用了适合于群组随机对照试验的乘积系数检验。
没有一个被检查的心理社会因素对脂肪摄入量的变化具有可靠的中介效应。单中介模型显示,感知障碍对脂肪摄入量变化的抑制作用具有统计学意义(p=0.011)。在多中介模型中,这种效应不再显著,这很可能是由于感知障碍的变化与自我效能(-0.30)和态度(-0.25)的变化中度相关。所检查的心理社会因素的总中介抑制效应几乎为零(总中介效应=0.001;SE=7.22;p=0.992)。
鉴于干预措施对态度、社会支持、自我效能和感知益处及障碍没有影响,因此建议未来的干预措施应集中于确定有效的策略,以改变这些理论中介因素的期望方向。或者,可以认为这些构念在针对青少年的干预措施中不需要针对这些构念,因为它们可能不是干预措施对脂肪摄入量影响的原因。为了对青春期女孩脂肪摄入量变化的中介因素以及最佳的未来干预策略得出任何结论,需要对心理社会变量的中介特性进行更系统的研究。