Joint Doctoral Program in Public Health, University of California, San Diego/San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr., San Diego, CA 92182, USA; Institute for Behavioral and Community Health, 9245 Sky Park Ct., Ste. 221, San Diego, CA 92123, USA.
Active Living Research, 3900 Fifth Ave., Ste. 310, San Diego, CA 92103, USA; Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Prev Med. 2017 Dec;105:337-344. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2017.10.010. Epub 2017 Oct 5.
Female adolescents are less active than male peers in certain contexts including the neighborhood. Adolescents' physical activity can be explained by interactions between environmental and psychosocial factors, but few studies have tested such interactions in relation to context-specific behaviors. This study tested interactions between neighborhood environmental and psychosocial factors in relation to adolescents' context-specific physical activity. Data were collected in 2009-11 from 910 adolescents and a parent/guardian residing in the Baltimore/Seattle regions. Measures included adolescent-reported neighborhood leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) and non-neighborhood LTPA, accelerometer-based non-school moderate-to vigorous-physical activity (MVPA), psychosocial factors, and objective and parent-perceived neighborhood environmental factors. Gender-stratified mixed effects linear models tested associations of 6 environmental and 4 psychosocial factors and their interactions in relation to each physical activity outcome. The psychosocial factors had consistent associations with the physical activity outcomes but the environmental correlates were context-specific. Decisional balance (weighing of pros and cons of physical activity) moderated the association between recreation facility density and neighborhood LTPA among females, with a negative association only among those with high decisional balance (pros outweighed cons). Decisional balance also moderated associations of neighborhood walkability with non-school MVPA among females and non-neighborhood LTPA among males, with positive associations only among those with high decisional balance. Results support context-specific ecological models of physical activity. Targeting environmental factors that may promote opportunities for physical activity in specific contexts as well as adolescent decision-making may help promote their physical activity in those contexts, potentially leading to increased overall physical activity.
女性青少年在某些情境下(包括邻里环境)比男性青少年的活动量少。青少年的身体活动水平可以通过环境和心理社会因素之间的相互作用来解释,但很少有研究检验过这些相互作用与特定情境行为之间的关系。本研究检验了邻里环境和心理社会因素之间的相互作用与青少年特定情境身体活动之间的关系。研究数据于 2009-2011 年期间从巴尔的摩/西雅图地区的 910 名青少年及其家长/监护人中收集。测量指标包括青少年自我报告的邻里闲暇时间身体活动(LTPA)和非邻里 LTPA、基于加速度计的非学校中到剧烈强度身体活动(MVPA)、心理社会因素以及客观和家长感知的邻里环境因素。性别分层混合效应线性模型检验了 6 个环境因素和 4 个心理社会因素及其相互作用与每个身体活动结果之间的关联。心理社会因素与身体活动结果之间存在一致的关联,但环境相关性是特定情境的。决策平衡(身体活动的利弊权衡)调节了休闲设施密度与女性邻里 LTPA 之间的关联,仅在决策平衡高(赞成身体活动的因素超过反对因素)的女性中存在负相关。决策平衡还调节了邻里可步行性与女性非学校 MVPA 和男性非邻里 LTPA 之间的关联,仅在决策平衡高的女性和男性中存在正相关。结果支持身体活动的特定情境生态模型。针对可能在特定情境中促进身体活动机会的环境因素以及青少年的决策制定,可能有助于在这些情境中促进他们的身体活动,从而潜在地增加整体身体活动水平。