Suppr超能文献

评估“活力生活再思考”运动。

Evaluating the ParticipACTION "Think Again" Campaign.

作者信息

Gainforth Heather L, Jarvis Jocelyn W, Berry Tanya R, Chulak-Bozzer Tala, Deshpande Sameer, Faulkner Guy, Rhodes Ryan E, Spence John C, Tremblay Mark S, Latimer-Cheung Amy E

机构信息

University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Columbia

Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada Health Promotion, Chronic Disease and Injury Prevention, Public Health Ontario, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

Health Educ Behav. 2016 Aug;43(4):434-41. doi: 10.1177/1090198115604614. Epub 2015 Sep 16.

Abstract

Introduction ParticipACTION's 2011 "Think Again" campaign aimed to draw parents', and specifically mothers', attention to the amount of physical activity (PA) their children do relative to the national guidelines (physical activity guidelines [PAG]). Purpose To evaluate ParticipACTION's "Think Again" campaign in the context of the hierarchy of effects model. Methods Data were drawn from "Think Again" campaign evaluations conducted among two cohorts of parents with children ages 5 to 11 years (3 months postcampaign launch [T1], n = 702; 15 months postlaunch [T2], n = 670). Results At T2, campaign awareness was weakly associated with parents agreeing that their children were not active enough (p = .01, d = .18). Parents who were aware of the campaign showed greater knowledge of PAG (ps < .01, ϕs > .14), had higher outcome expectations about their children engaging in PA (p < .01, d = .16), had stronger intentions to help their child meet the guidelines (p < .01, d = .18), and engaged in more parental support behaviors (p < .001, d = .31) as compared with parents who were not aware. At T1, parents aware of the campaign had greater perceived behavioral control (PBC) to influence their child's PA participation (p < .01, d = .22), whereas parents not aware of the campaign had greater PBC to find practical ways to help their child be active (p < .01, d = .26). Parental awareness of the campaign was not associated with children meeting the PAG at either time point (ps > .05). Conclusions The campaign appeared marginally effective for increasing parental knowledge of PAG and for creating realistic awareness of children's PA levels. Additional intervention strategies are needed to produce larger effects and to change parental behavior.

摘要

引言

参与行动组织2011年的“重新思考”运动旨在引起家长,尤其是母亲对其孩子相对于国家指南(体育活动指南[PAG])的体育活动(PA)量的关注。

目的

在效果层次模型的背景下评估参与行动组织的“重新思考”运动。

方法

数据来自对两组有5至11岁孩子的家长进行的“重新思考”运动评估(运动发起后3个月[T1],n = 702;发起后15个月[T2],n = 670)。

结果

在T2时,运动知晓度与家长认同其孩子运动量不足之间存在微弱关联(p = 0.01,d = 0.18)。知晓该运动的家长对PAG有更多了解(p < 0.01,ϕ > 0.14),对孩子参与体育活动有更高的结果期望(p < 0.01,d = 0.16),有更强的帮助孩子达到指南要求的意愿(p < 0.01,d = 0.18),并且与不知晓的家长相比,参与了更多的家长支持行为(p < 0.001,d = 0.31)。在T1时,知晓运动的家长在影响孩子参与体育活动方面有更高的感知行为控制(PBC)(p < 0.01,d = 0.22),而不知晓运动的家长在找到帮助孩子活跃起来的实际方法方面有更高的PBC(p < 0.01,d = 0.26)。在两个时间点,家长对运动的知晓度均与孩子达到PAG无关(p > 0.05)。

结论

该运动在增加家长对PAG的了解以及对孩子体育活动水平形成现实认识方面似乎有一定效果。需要额外的干预策略来产生更大影响并改变家长行为。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验