de Heer Hendrik Dirk, de la Haye Kayla, Skapinsky Kaley, Goergen Andrea F, Wilkinson Anna V, Koehly Laura M
1 Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA.
2 National Human Genome Research Institute, Bethesda, MD, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2017 Feb;44(1):141-152. doi: 10.1177/1090198116644703. Epub 2016 Jul 9.
Due to shared health behaviors and disease risk, families may be more effective targets for health promotion. This study assessed whether providing family health history (FHH)-based risk information for heart disease and diabetes affected encouragement to engage in physical activity (PA) and healthy weight (HW) maintenance and co-engagement in physical activity among 320 Mexican-origin parents and their 1,081 children.
At baseline and 10 months, parents indicated who they encouraged and who encouraged them to engage in PA/HW, and with whom they co-engaged in PA. Households were randomized to receive FHH-based assessments either by one or all adult household members. Primary analyses consisted of regression analyses using generalized estimating equations.
At baseline, parents reported encouraging their child for both PA and HW in 37.6% of parent-child dyads and reported receiving children's encouragement for both in 12.1% of dyads. These increased to 56.8% and 17.5% at 10 months ( p < .001). Co-engagement in PA increased from 11.4% to 15.7% ( p < .001), with younger children (30.4%) and mother-daughter dyads (26.8%) most likely to co-engage at 10 months. Providing FHH-based risk information to all adult household members (vs. one) was associated with increased parent-to-child encouragement of PA/HW ( p = .011) at 10 months but not child-to-parent encouragement. New encouragement from parent-to-child ( p = .048) and from child-to-parent ( p = .003) predicted new 10-month PA co-engagement.
Providing FHH information on a household level can promote parental encouragement for PA/HW, which can promote greater parent-child co-engagement in PA. In this high-risk population with a cultural emphasis on family ties, using FHH-based risk information for all adult household members may be a promising avenue to promote PA.
由于共同的健康行为和疾病风险,家庭可能是更有效的健康促进目标群体。本研究评估了为墨西哥裔的320名父母及其1081名子女提供基于家族病史(FHH)的心脏病和糖尿病风险信息,是否会影响他们参与体育活动(PA)、维持健康体重(HW)的积极性以及亲子共同参与体育活动的情况。
在基线期和10个月时,父母指出他们鼓励谁以及谁鼓励他们参与体育活动/维持健康体重,以及他们与谁共同参与体育活动。家庭被随机分配,由一名或所有成年家庭成员接受基于家族病史的评估。主要分析包括使用广义估计方程的回归分析。
在基线期,父母报告在37.6%的亲子二元组中鼓励孩子参与体育活动和维持健康体重,在12.1%的二元组中报告得到孩子对这两方面的鼓励。在10个月时,这些比例分别增至56.8%和17.5%(p <.001)。共同参与体育活动的比例从11.4%增至15.7%(p <.001),10个月时年幼儿童(30.4%)及母女二元组(26.8%)最有可能共同参与。在10个月时,向所有成年家庭成员(而非仅一名成员)提供基于家族病史的风险信息,与父母对孩子参与体育活动/维持健康体重的鼓励增加相关(p = 0.011),但与孩子对父母的鼓励无关。父母对孩子(p = 0.048)及孩子对父母(p = 0.003)新的鼓励行为,预示着在10个月时会有新的共同参与体育活动的情况。
在家庭层面提供家族病史信息可促进父母对孩子参与体育活动/维持健康体重的鼓励,进而促进亲子在体育活动中的更多共同参与。在这个高度重视家庭关系的高危人群中利用基于家族病史的风险信息,对所有成年家庭成员而言,可能是促进体育活动的一条有效途径。