Department of family medicine, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Canada.
Centre de formation médicale du Nouveau-Brunswick, Université de Sherbrooke, Moncton, NB, Canada.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2021 Mar 22;18(1):43. doi: 10.1186/s12966-021-01107-w.
Social factors are important determinants of youth physical activity (PA), but the longitudinal association between parental behaviours and adolescent PA has not been clearly assessed. This prospective study examined average and lagged associations between perceived parental support and control with adolescents' moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA); and assessed the independent associations between specific parental support and control behaviours and adolescents' MVPA.
Data from three cycles of the MATCH study, when 374 participants were 12, 16 and 17 years old, were included in this analysis. At each cycle, participants self-reported questionnaires on perceived tangible parental support, intangible support, and control behaviours as well as number of days per week attaining at least 60 min of MVPA. Mixed effect models were used to assess the longitudinal relationship between parental behaviours and MVPA. Cross-lagged panel design was used to assess the association of parental behaviours during early adolescence with MVPA during late adolescence.
Overall parental support (coef. = 0.46, P < 0.0001), tangible support (coef. = 0.37, P < 0.0001), encouragement (coef. = 0.12, P = 0.025) and transportation (coef. = 0.25, P < 0.0001) were positively associated with MVPA, whereas parental control was a negative predictor of MVPA (coef. = - 0.18, P = 0.003). Perceived parental behaviours appeared to have long term associations (5 y.) with MVPA as parent support (coef. = 0.40, P = 0.006) and co-participation (coef. = 0.33, P = 0.017) reported around age 12 were positively associated with MVPA measured 5 years later.
Parental support for PA, particularly in the form of tangible support, may be a key factor to include in interventions aiming to promote PA during adolescence. In contrast, parents should be encouraged to avoid control behaviours as these appear to lead to lower MVPA among adolescents.
社会因素是影响青少年身体活动(PA)的重要决定因素,但父母行为与青少年 PA 之间的纵向关联尚未得到明确评估。本前瞻性研究旨在考察感知到的父母支持和控制与青少年中度到剧烈 PA(MVPA)之间的平均和滞后关联;并评估特定父母支持和控制行为与青少年 MVPA 之间的独立关联。
本研究分析了 MATCH 研究三个周期的数据,共有 374 名参与者在 12、16 和 17 岁时参与了研究。在每个周期中,参与者自我报告了感知到的有形父母支持、无形支持和控制行为,以及每周达到至少 60 分钟 MVPA 的天数。混合效应模型用于评估父母行为与 MVPA 之间的纵向关系。交叉滞后面板设计用于评估青少年早期父母行为与青少年晚期 MVPA 之间的关联。
总体而言,父母支持(系数=0.46,P<0.0001)、有形支持(系数=0.37,P<0.0001)、鼓励(系数=0.12,P=0.025)和交通(系数=0.25,P<0.0001)与 MVPA 呈正相关,而父母控制是 MVPA 的负预测因子(系数=-0.18,P=0.003)。父母行为似乎与 MVPA 存在长期关联(5 年),因为 12 岁左右报告的父母支持(系数=0.40,P=0.006)和共同参与(系数=0.33,P=0.017)与 5 年后测量的 MVPA 呈正相关。
父母对 PA 的支持,特别是有形支持,可能是促进青少年 PA 的干预措施中的一个关键因素。相比之下,应鼓励父母避免控制行为,因为这些行为似乎会导致青少年 MVPA 降低。