Trigwell Joanne, Murphy Rebecca Catherine, Cable Nigel Timothy, Stratton Gareth, Watson Paula Mary
Institute for Health and Wellbeing, Leeds Beckett University, Leeds, UK.
Physical Activity Exchange, Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Oct 2;15:1005. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-2351-8.
Guidelines recommend children and young people participate in at least 60 min of physical activity (PA) every day, however, findings from UK studies show PA levels of children vary across ethnic groups. Since parents play an instrumental role in determining children's PA levels, this article aims to explore parental views of children's PA in a multi-ethnic sample living in a large city in the North-West of England.
Six single-ethnic focus groups were conducted with 36 parents of school-aged children (4 to 16 years) with a predominantly low socio-economic status (SES). Parents self-identified their ethnic background as Asian Bangladeshi (n = 5), Black African (n = 4), Black Somali (n = 7), Chinese (n = 6), White British (n = 8) and Yemeni (n = 6). Focus group topics included understanding of PA, awareness of PA guidelines, knowledge of benefits associated with PA and perceived influences on PA in childhood. Data were analysed thematically using QSR NVivo 9.0.
Parents from all ethnic groups valued PA and were aware of its benefits, however they lacked awareness of PA recommendations, perceived school to be the main provider for children's PA, and reported challenges in motivating children to be active. At the environmental level, barriers to PA included safety concerns, adverse weather, lack of resources and lack of access. Additional barriers were noted for ethnic groups from cultures that prioritised educational attainment over PA (Asian Bangladeshi, Chinese, Yemeni) and with a Muslim faith (Asian Bangladeshi, Black Somali, Yemeni), who reported a lack of culturally appropriate PA opportunities for girls.
Parents from multi-ethnic groups lacked awareness of children's PA recommendations and faced barriers to promoting children's PA out of school, with certain ethnic groups facing additional barriers due to cultural and religious factors. It is recommended children's PA interventions address influences at all socio-ecological levels, and account for differences between ethnic groups.
指南建议儿童和青少年每天至少进行60分钟的体育活动(PA),然而,英国研究结果显示,不同种族儿童的体育活动水平存在差异。由于父母在决定孩子的体育活动水平方面起着重要作用,本文旨在探讨居住在英格兰西北部大城市的多民族样本中父母对孩子体育活动的看法。
对36名学龄儿童(4至16岁)的父母进行了6个单一民族焦点小组访谈,这些父母的社会经济地位(SES)大多较低。父母自我认定其种族背景为孟加拉亚裔(n = 5)、非洲黑人(n = 4)、索马里黑人(n = 7)、华裔(n = 6)、英国白人(n = 8)和也门人(n = 6)。焦点小组讨论的主题包括对体育活动的理解、对体育活动指南的认识、与体育活动相关的益处的知识以及对童年体育活动的感知影响。使用QSR NVivo 9.0对数据进行主题分析。
所有种族的父母都重视体育活动并意识到其益处,然而他们对体育活动建议缺乏认识,认为学校是孩子体育活动的主要提供者,并报告在激励孩子积极参与方面存在挑战。在环境层面,体育活动的障碍包括安全担忧、恶劣天气、资源短缺和缺乏机会。对于那些将学业成就置于体育活动之上的文化背景的种族群体(孟加拉亚裔、华裔、也门人)以及有穆斯林信仰的群体(孟加拉亚裔、索马里黑人、也门人),还存在其他障碍,他们报告说女孩缺乏适合其文化的体育活动机会。
多民族群体的父母对儿童体育活动建议缺乏认识,并且在促进孩子校外体育活动方面面临障碍,某些种族群体由于文化和宗教因素面临额外障碍。建议儿童体育活动干预措施应对所有社会生态层面的影响,并考虑种族群体之间的差异。