Clark D O, Patrick D L, Grembowski D, Durham M L
Indiana University, Department of Medicine, Regenstrief Institute for Health Care, Indianapolis 46202-2859, USA.
J Behav Med. 1995 Aug;18(4):355-76. doi: 10.1007/BF01857660.
Self-efficacy, or assessments about one's ability to carry out particular tasks, has been shown to play a central role in the adoption and maintenance of exercise. The relationship between exercise self-efficacy and socioeconomic status (SES), however, has not been formally developed or tested, and the implications of SES for exercise interventions are not known. We hypothesize pathways through which income, education, and occupation affect self-efficacy and capitalize on the availability of responses from 1944 older HMO enrollees to investigate the direct and indirect associations of SES indicators with exercise self-efficacy. Direct associations of age and education are found. Indirect associations of age, income, education, and occupation operate primarily through previous exercise experience, satisfaction with amount of walking, depression, and outcome expectations. The potentially modifiable nature of exercise outcome expectations (i.e., belief in the benefits of exercise) in combination with its strong association with exercise self-efficacy argue in support of greater consideration of its role in attempts to improve exercise self-efficacy.
自我效能感,即对自己执行特定任务能力的评估,已被证明在运动的采纳和维持中起着核心作用。然而,运动自我效能感与社会经济地位(SES)之间的关系尚未得到正式阐述或检验,SES对运动干预的影响也尚不清楚。我们推测了收入、教育和职业影响自我效能感的途径,并利用1944名老年健康维护组织(HMO)参保者的回答来研究SES指标与运动自我效能感之间的直接和间接关联。研究发现了年龄和教育程度的直接关联。年龄、收入、教育和职业的间接关联主要通过以往的运动经历、对步行量的满意度、抑郁以及结果期望来起作用。运动结果期望(即相信运动的益处)具有潜在的可改变性,且与运动自我效能感密切相关,这表明在试图提高运动自我效能感时,应更多地考虑其作用。