| Literature DB >> 22496702 |
Melinda J Ickes1, Manoj Sharma.
Abstract
Healthy People 2020 aims to achieve health equity, eliminate disparities, and improve the health of all groups. Regular physical activity (PA) improves overall health and fitness and has the capability to reduce risk for chronic diseases. Identifying barriers which relate to the Hispanic population is important when designing PA interventions. Therefore, the purpose was to review existing PA interventions targeting Hispanic adults published between 1988 and 2011. This paper was limited to interventions which included more than 35% Hispanic adults (n = 20). Most of the interventions were community based (n = 16), although clinical, family-based, and faith-based settings were also represented. Interventions incorporated theory (n = 16), with social cognitive theory and transtheoretical model being used most frequently. Social support was integral, building on the assumption that it is a strong motivator of PA. Each of the interventions reported success related to PA, social support, and/or BMI. Lessons learned should be incorporated into future interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22496702 PMCID: PMC3306912 DOI: 10.1155/2012/156435
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Public Health ISSN: 1687-9805
Summary of Physical Activity Interventions in Hispanic Adults.
| Study | Age/% of Hispanic participants | Theory | Design & sample | Measures | Intervention | Duration | Salient findings |
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| Albright et al. [ | 18–66 years; 70% Mexican American/Latino women | Transtheoretical Model | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; | Knowledge; perceived barriers to exercise; self-efficacy for PA; social support for exercise; motivational readiness for PA; processes of change; decisional balance; 7-day PA recall; acculturation; BMI; CVD risk factors | Eight 1-hour weekly behavioral skill building sessions; focused on overcoming barriers, setting short-term goals, and developing a PA program; cultural tailored curriculum including ethnically matched health educators; home-based randomized trial began after the series of classes and included either mail support or ongoing PA counseling via telephone and mail (14 calls over 10 months) | 8 weeks then 10 months | After preintervention 8-week preparatory course, there was a significant increase in knowledge, perceived social support, walking minutes per week, and total cognitive and behavioral processes ( |
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| Avila & Hovell [ | 40–44 years | Not mentioned | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; | Attitudes; beliefs; knowledge of exercise; MVPA; BMI; BP; glucose; cholesterol; waist/hip circumference; 1-mile walk and estimated VO2 max | Eight 1-hour sessions consisting of self-change behavioral modification; assistance from an assigned buddy (social support); stretching and walking component (led for 20 mins. of walking during each session) conducted by bicultural Spanish speaking physician | 8 weeks | Statistically significant ( |
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| Bopp et al. [ | Mean age = 42.5 years (SD = 12.1); 81.1% of Mexican descent | Not mentioned | Three-group RCT (2 intervention, 1 comparison); | Process evaluation outcomes; PA knowledge; height; weight; program barriers; activity awareness | Faithful Footsteps Program; Faith-based physical activity intervention; culturally and spiritually relevant educational materials and activities developed promoting the health benefits of PA; team-based walking contest to promote social support for PA; health “fiesta” provided hands-on educational opportunities for PA | 8 week | 66% of participants identified health reasons for participating in PA (compared to 36%); 47% accurately described PA recommendations (versus 16%) |
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| Castenada et al. [ | Mean age = 66 years; all Hispanic, Caribbean descent (84–90%) | Not mentioned | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; over 55 years; type 2 diabetes; | Glycemic and metabolic control; BMI; WHR; % body fat; 7-day PA recall; muscle strength with 1RM | Structured 45 mins. exercise session 3 times/week; progressively increased intensity | 16 weeks | Leisure and household physical activity levels significantly improved in intervention group |
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| Castro et al. [ | 24–55 years; 45.3% Hispanic | Self-management model | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; | PA minutes per week; barriers, enjoyment; self-efficacy; social support | Walking program with one session per week; participants given written materials and health and weekly phone counseling sessions; focusing on informational control, education, social support, motivation, problem-solving, and improving self-efficacy | 6 weeks | At 5-month followup, PA, barriers, enjoyment, and self-efficacy were not significant; increase in social support was significant ( |
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| Chen et al. [ | 23–54 years; 44.5% Hispanic women | Social cognitive theory | Two group by three repeated measures quasiexperimental design (randomized to comparison or treatment); | Self-reported walking; subsample-used accelerometers | Home-based behavioral intervention to promote walking; intervention group received six phone calls (20–30 mins.) with counseling versus educational phone calls intended to increase self-efficacy, assess barriers, problem solve to promote social support | 8 weeks | Both conditions increased self-reported walking at the 2 months after test( |
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| Grass et al. [ | 18–55 years; 72% Hispanic women | Not mentioned | Nonexperimental-repeated measures design; | PA minutes per week; PA barriers | Participatory action research; four sessions over 3 months of “walking clubs”; family focused to influence social support; written materials in English and Spanish | 3 months | No significance in PA; PA barriers significance ( |
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| Hayashi et al. [ | 40–64 years; 100% Hispanic Women | Transtheoretical model | RCT at 4 sites; lower income under or uninsured; at risk for CVD; | Stage of readiness questionnaire; cholesterol, BP, BMI, coronary heart disease risk; PA level/ intensity/barrier | Wisewoman; delivered by community health workers who were bilingual and bicultural; focused on health behavior counseling | 3 lifestyle sessions (30–45 mins.) | Improvement in PA readiness for change in 68% of intervention group; achieving a high degree of improvement in PA was twice as likely; improvement in estimated 10-year CHD risk |
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| Hovell et al. [ | 18–55 years; 100% Hispanic Women | Operant learning theory | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; low income; sedentary immigrants; | Physical activity; aerobic fitness VO2 max; height; weight; BP; glucose; insulin; lipid measurements | Three 90-minute sessions per week of supervised aerobic dance in a community setting; 5 : 1 participant to staff ratio; bilingual Aerobic instructor; 30-mins. of exercise/diet education after each session including culturally appropriate materials; problem-solve barriers; assigned exercise buddy | 6 months | More vigorous exercise and walking at posttest for intervention group ( |
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| Ingram et al. [ | 33–95 years; 100% Hispanic | Grounded theory | Qualitative (focus groups); w/diabetes; | Focus group explored themes related to self-efficacy and social support (conducted in Spanish) | Animadora study; community-based intervention to promote walking; series of walking groups led by individuals who had demonstrated success and expressed desire to help others; met 3 times/week | 12 weeks | Social support expressed as commitment and companionship; walkers demonstrated a high level of self-efficacy for walking; development of group identity/social cohesion was a motivator to walk |
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| Keele-Smith [ | 18–59 years; staff and students at New Mexico University; 42% Hispanic | Reversal theory | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; | PA frequency and duration; weight, body fat; exercise motivation; social support | Participants given brochure highlighting general information about exercise; individualized-written exercise prescription developed based on baseline data; one-on-one weekly educational seminars 30–45 mins.; monitoring only group that received weekly phone calls | 5 weeks | More participants in intervention group were meeting PA recommendations; no significant differences in weight, body fat; consistent exercisers had significantly higher motivation scores than did inconsistent exercisers |
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| Keller and Cantue [ | 45–70 years; 100% Hispanic women | Not Mentioned | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; women who were postmenopausal, obese, and sedentary; | bioelectric impedance and BMI; anthropometric measures; total serum cholesterol; PAR; PA log; community/friend/family assessment for exercise survey; acculturation scale | Camina por Salud; clinical feasibility study designed to evaluate the effects of two frequencies of walking (3 versus 5 days/week); 30 minutes at the pace of a 20-minute mile (3.2-MET intensity | 36 weeks | Significiant differences in BMI reduction, ( |
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| Leeman-Castillo et al. [ | 31–50 years; 100% Hispanic | Social science theory | Nonexperimental two-group-repeated measures design; Spanish & English speaking recruited ≥21 years; | Self-report PA | LUCHAR; Community-based health kiosk program, English or Spanish; users receive personalized feedback from computerized role models that guide them in establishing goals; printout at the completion of the program includes personal program summary and referrals for local resources | 1-session; 2-month followup for risk assessment | Significant increase in participants meeting PA recommendations in community setting (33% to 49%) and clinic setting (45% to 65%) at 2-month followup |
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| Martyn-Nemeth et al. [ | 30–65 years; 100% Hispanic | Social ecological model | Nonexperimental one-group-repeated measures design; w/type 2 diabetes; low income; | Hemoglobin A1C, lipids, psychological well-being; BMI; daily exercise log | Community-based, culturally designed exercise program through dance (60 mins.) received weekly exercise appointment cards | 12 weeks | 80% of the reported becoming physically active at least 6 days per week or more; no significiant change in BMI; trend toward improved psychological well-being & diabetes measures |
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| Mier et al. [ | Mean age = 32.4 years; 93.8% Mexico country of origin | Transtheoretical model | Nonexperimental one-group-repeated measures design; | Physical walking level; depressive symptoms; stress; BMI | Spanish handbook (Let's Walk) developed to include information which was culturally appropriate used individualized problem-solving and self-management strategies; use of social support | 12 weeks | Significant differences for walking MET ( |
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| Olvera et al. [ | 28–48 years; 100% Hispanic mother-daughter pairs | Social cognitive theory | Two-arm experimental design; lower income mother/daughter pairs; | Acculturation scale; BMI; shuttle run test or rockport walk test; accelerometers; SPAN survey; nonexercise PA rating | Bounce; family-based program delivered in community and school settings; 3-week structured group aerobic, sport sessions, or free play recreational activities; 1-week behavioral counseling session | 12 weeks | No significiant differences in mother's physical fitness or PA levels; no significiant differences in BMI; although daughters did exhibit significant changes in physical fitness and PA levels ( |
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| Pekmezi et al. [ | 18–65; 100% Hispanic women | Transtheoretical model; social cognitive theory | Two-group-repeated measures RCT; low-income, acculturated, majority overweight/Obese; inactive; | Self-report PA, 7-day PA recall; height, weight; social support; environmental access scale; CES-D scale; stage of change | Seamos activas; emphasized behavioral strategies such as goal-setting, monitoring, problem-solving, barriers, increasing social support, and rewarding oneself for meeting PA goals; monthly educational materials mailed based on individual-level-tailored feedback | 6 months | MVPA increased from 16.56 mins./week to 147.27 min.; significiant increase in cognitive and behavioral processes of change ( |
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| Poston et al. [ | Mean age = 39.2 years; 70% USA. born Hispanic women | Social cognitive theory | RCT prospective block design (preestablished social groups); overweight or obese; | 7-day PAR; BMI; WHR; blood lipids; BP; social support; health locus of control | One session per week for 12 months focused on influence of education, use of social support networks, dealing with negative influences, and restructuring personal environment; instructors were bilingual; bilingual materials; participated in 30 mins. of walking during the weekly meeting and walking clubs set up during the week | 12 months | Intervention participants were not more active than controls at 6 or 12 months; no significant changes in BMI, PA recommendations, and blood lipids; significantly fewer participants who met the activity goal in the treatment group compared to wait-list control group at baseline (22% versus 25%) |
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| Staten et al. [ | Mean age = 57.2 years; 74% Hispanic women | Social cognitive theory | Three-group (interventions) randomized experimental design; uninsured over 50 years; | BMI; WHR; cholesterol; glucose; activity frequency questionnaire | One group received provider counseling (PC) (active control); 2nd group received health education classes and a monthly newsletter as well as PC (PC + HE); 3rd group received all of the above and social support provided by community health workers (PC + HE + CHW); CHW were bilingual Hispanic women; CHW led bimonthly walks and encouraged participants to find walking partners, build social support | 12 months | All groups showed significant increase in MVPA with no significant differences between groups; BP decreased significiant among PC + HE + CHW ( |
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| Yan et al. [ | Mean age = 72.9 years; 50.5% Hispanic | Transtheoretical model | Quasiexperimental design (intervention and small wait-list comparison); over 50 years; sedentary; | Participation rates; physical performance | Active start: 1 hour per week in a group setting to set goals, identify barriers, and establish social support system; after week 4, participants met 3 times/week for 45 mins.; exercises were performed to culturally preferred music; given safe exercises at home handout | 6 months | Significant improvements in fitness testing measures among intervention group, including Hispanics within this group ( |
Figure 1Summary of search results.