| Literature DB >> 25886506 |
Kathryn R Hesketh1,2, Esther M F van Sluijs3, Rachel E Blaine4, Elsie M Taveras5, Matthew W Gillman6, Sara E Benjamin Neelon7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As children now spend increasing amounts of time in out-of-home care, care providers play an important role in promoting positive health behaviors. Little is currently known about providers' perceptions and beliefs about physical activity, particularly for very young children. This study describes providers' perceptions and beliefs about infants' and toddlers' physical activity, and assesses their knowledge of physical activity guidelines, to establish if and where providers may need support to promote physical activity in child care settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25886506 PMCID: PMC4334406 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1477-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Infant and toddler providers’ perceptions and beliefs about physical activity (derived from Baby NAPSACC questionnaires )
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| Part of my job is making sure children get a healthy amount of physical activity | 97.0 |
| Teachers are very influential in helping children get a healthy amount of physical activity | 94.6 |
| I can get most children to be active during outdoor play and physical activities | 93.1 |
| I feel prepared to encourage children to be physically active | 92.1 |
| An important aspect of my work is providing children with opportunities for physical activity | 91.0 |
| When I make an effort to encourage children to be active, they get a lot of physical activity | 90.1 |
| Teachers are well suited to promote physical activity in young children | 87.6 |
| Teachers have limited responsibility to promote physical activity in young children | 22.8 |
| Encouraging adequate physical activity in children is not the responsibility of the teacher | 7.9 |
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| Physical activity is important to my own health | 94.1 |
| I find it hard to work up the energy for my own physical activity | 13.3 |
| Physical activity is low on the list of things I want to do | 7.4 |
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| It is important for < I/T > to learn new physical skills | 91.3 |
| It is important for < I/T > to be physically active from an early age | 88.2 |
| Being physically active as an < I/T > can help prevent too much weight gain | 72.1 |
| A physically active < I/T > tends to make the house messy | 25.3 |
| A physically active < I/T > is likely to hurt him/herself easily | 20.5 |
| <I/T > should learn to be still in public places at an early age | 19.3 |
| I can attend to my other responsibilities better if I do not have to worry about < I/T > moving around | 13.8 |
| It is difficult to manage a physically active < I/T> | 11.2 |
| A physically active < I/T > is likely to get into trouble | 10.6 |
1Provider perceptions about their role in supporting physical activity in young children (9 questions), and their own physical activity (3 questions) [34] (n = 203); 2Providers’ beliefs about physical activity in infants and toddlers [35] (n = 161); I: Infant; T: Toddler.
Provider-perceived daily activity requirements for infants and toddlers
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| 1-15 minutes | 27 (14.7) | 0 (0) |
| 16-30 minutes | 47 (25.5) | 19 (10.1) |
| 31-45 minutes | 40 (21.7) | 32 (16.9) |
| 46-60 minutes | 34 (18.5) | 52 (27.5) |
| 61-90 minutes | 17 (9.2) | 30 (15.9) |
| 91-120 minutes | 6 (3.3) | 30 (15.9) |
| 121-150 minutes | 13 (7.1) | 26 (13.8) |
1184 infant care providers answered the question: “How many minutes of physical activity should infants 0-12 months of age get each day?”; 2189 toddler care providers answered the question: “How many minutes of physical activity should toddlers 12-24 months of age get each day?”.