| Literature DB >> 23895288 |
Carlie Jones1, Jonine Jancey, Peter Howat, Satvinder Dhaliwal, Sharyn Burns, Alexandra McManus, Andrew P Hills, Annie S Anderson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objective of this research was to assess the physical activity levels among a unique cohort of Western Australian (WA) mothers with young children who attend a WA Playgroup. Associated factors were also investigated, including self-efficacy for physical activity, social support for exercise, relevant socio-demographic correlates, as well as the stages of change construct within the Transtheoretical Model (TTM).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23895288 PMCID: PMC3734053 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-6-300
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
A comparison of the sample demographics with the perinatal statistics in Western Australia 2008 report[39]
| 18-24 | 6 (1.5%) | 5882 (19.8%) |
| 25-29 | 48 (11.7%) | 8162 (27.4%) |
| 30-34 | 134 (32.5%) | 9211 (30.9%) |
| 35-39 | 174 (42.2%) | 5475 (18.4%) |
| 40-44 | 45 (10.9%) | 993 (3.3%) |
| 45+ | 5 (1.2%) | 39 (0.1%) |
| Australia | 291 (69.3%) | 20852 (71.1%) |
| Other | 129 (30.7%) | 8471 (28.9%) |
| Married / Defacto | 406 (97.1%) | 27137 (89.8%) |
| Other | 12 (2.9%) | 3097 (10.2%) |
| 1 child | 113 (27.4%) | 12478 (41.3%) |
| 2-3 children | 286 (69.4%) | 14830 (49.1%) |
| 4-5 children | 13 (3.2%) | 2387 (7.9%) |
| 6+ | 0 (0%) | 539 (1.8%) |
| North metropolitan | 226 (53.6%) | 12118 (52.5%) |
| South metropolitan | 196 (46.4%) | 10942 (47.5%) |
| I | 93 (22.6%) | 7268 (24.5%) |
| II | 125 (30.3%) | 4382 (14.7%) |
| III | 92 (22.3%) | 5840 (19.7%) |
| IV | 46 (11.2%) | 6431 (21.6%) |
| V | 56 (13.6%) | 5792 (19.5%) |
| Completed year 10 | 19 (5%) | |
| Completed year 11 | 16 (4%) | |
| Completed year 12 | 47 (11%) | |
| TAFE/Diploma | 112 (26%) | |
| University degree | 212 (50%) | |
| Other | 13 (3%) | |
| Part-time | 114 (27%) | |
| Full-time | 6 (1%) | |
| Casual | 45 (11%) | |
| Student | 8 (2%) | |
| Currently not working outside the home | 246 (58%) | |
Note: Socio-economic quintiles are based on the index of relative socio-economic advantage and disadvantage produced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2008 [38]. Group V depicts the lowest socio-economic status and group I represents the highest [39].
A comparison of active and inactive participants
| 18-29 | 9 (14.3%) | 37 (12.4%) |
| 30-39 | 44 (69.8%) | 228 (76.5%) |
| 40+ | 10 (15.9%) | 33 (11.1%) |
| Australia | 46 (71.9%) | 209 (69%) |
| Other | 18 (28.1%) | 94 (31%) |
| Married / Defacto | 56 (88.9%) | 264 (87.4%) |
| Other | 7 (11.1%) | 38 (12.6%) |
| 1 child | 16 (26.2%) | 82 (27.3%) |
| 2+ | 45 (73.8%) | 218 (72.7%) |
| I | 36 (57.1%) | 166 (56.1%) |
| II | 12 (19%) | 51 (17.2%) |
| III | 4 (6.3%) | 23 (7.8%) |
| IV | 8 (12.7%) | 42 (14.2%) |
| V | 3 (4.8%) | 14 (4.7%) |
| Never attend, year 7–12 or other | 16 (25%) | 65 (21.5%) |
| TAFE/Diploma | 11 (17.2%) | 81 (26.8%) |
| University degree | 37 (57.8%) | 156 (51.7%) |
| <$18,200 to $51,999 | 7 (11.1%) | 31 (10.6%) |
| $52,000 to $62,339 | 6 (9.5%) | 12 (4.1%) |
| $62,400 to $72,799 | 6 (9.5%) | 35 (11.9%) |
| $72,800 to $88,399 | 6 (9.5%) | 34 (11.6%) |
| $88,400 to $103,999 | 13 (20.6%) | 52 (17.7%) |
| $104,000 to $129,999 | 13 (20.6%) | 51 (17.4%) |
| >$130,000 | 12 (19%) | 78 (26.6%) |
| Underweight (<18.5) | 1 (1.6%) | 10 (3.6%) |
| Healthy Weight (18.5-24.9) | 34 (55.7%) | 142 (50.9%) |
| Pre-obese (25–29.9) | 9 (14.8%) | 68 (24.4%) |
| Obese I (30–34.9) | 6 (9.8%) | 28 (10%) |
| Obese II (35–39.9) or Obese III (>40) | 3 (4.9%) | 6 (2.2%) |
| Part-time or full-time | 23 (35.9%) | 83 (27.5%) |
| Casual, student or not working | 41 (64.1%) | 219 (72.5%) |
| Pregnant | 9 (14.1%) | 25 (8.3%) |
| Not pregnant | 55 (85.9%) | 278 (91.7%) |
| Breastfeeding | 9 (14.1%) | 67 (22.1%) |
| Not breastfeeding | 55 (85.9%) | 236 (77.9%) |
| Stage 1 (Pre-contemplation) | 8 (12.5%) | 5 (1.7%) |
| Stage 2 (Contemplation) | 21 (32.8%) | 33 (10.9%) |
| Stage 3 (Preparation) | 14 (21.9%) | 54 (17.9%) |
| Stage 4 (Action) | 6 (9.4%) | 57 (18.9%) |
| Stage 5 (Maintenance) | 5 (7.8%) | 115 (38.1%) |
| Stage 6 (Relapse) | 10 (15.6%) | 38 (12.6%) |
Note: Socio-economic quintiles are based on the index of relative socio-economic advantage and disadvantage produced by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2008 [38]. Group V depicts the lowest socio-economic status and group I represents the highest [39].
Figure 1Percentiles of physically active mothers with young children within Exercise Stages of Change construct. Note: * denotes that the exercise stage of change was significantly different (p<0.01) compared to stage one.