| Literature DB >> 26160058 |
Anne-Mari Jussila1, Tommi Vasankari2, Olavi Paronen3, Harri Sievänen4, Kari Tokola5,6, Henri Vähä-Ypyä7, Anna Broberg8, Minna Aittasalo9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescents' physical activity (PA) is decreasing and sedentary behavior (SB) increasing alarmingly. Insufficient PA and excessive SB are both related to various health risks indicating that interventions to promote adolescents' PA and to reduce their SB are needed. Schools have a great potential to reach most adolescents, and in Finland health education (HE) as stand-alone subject provides an excellent platform for health promotion. This paper describes the protocol and evaluation (RE-AIM) of an intervention developed for three HE lessons to increase PA and reduce SB during leisure among 8(th) graders. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26160058 PMCID: PMC4702359 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2007-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Timetable of the Kids Out! -intervention
Fig. 2FeetEnergy -homework leaflet for adolescents and a classroom poster
The structure and contents of the health education lessons guided by the Health Action Process approach [23]
| Procedure | Contents | Elements of HAPA |
|---|---|---|
| Orientation Phase | ||
| Lesson 1: Orientation | - Teacher presents the intervention and informs about the SoftGIS questionnaire | - attitudes |
| - Students complete the SoftGIS questionnaire via internet ( | ||
| - Homework 1 for the next lesson: FeetEnergy-homework leaflet and instructions | ||
| Motivational Phase: Intention building | ||
| Homework 1 - Me & PA | - FeetEnergy-homework leaflet, part 1: Self-assessment of time spent in a) active commuting to school, b) moderate-intensity physical activity (PA) and c) sedentary behavior (SB) and self-conclusion about meeting the recommendations for health. | - attitudes |
| Lesson 2: Me, peers & PA | - Teacher shows three feedback views based on the school-specific SoftGIS responses (Fig. | - attitudes, outcome expectancies, pre-action self-efficacy, intention |
| View 1: active commuting to school | ||
| Map of the city of Tampere is shown with a dot indicating the school ⇒ proportion of students by gender and an average minutes of walking or cycling to school within 4 distance circles from home (less than 1 km, 1-3 km, 3-5 km, more than 5 km) is shown | ||
| View 2: leisure time PA | - action planning, action self-efficacy | |
| The quantity of moderate-intensity LTPA is shown by average and by sex | ||
| View 3: screen time | ||
| The proportion of students meeting the recommendation of screen-viewing up to 2 hours are shown by average and by sex | ||
| - Homework for the next lesson: Link to FeetEnergy -video ( | ||
| Volitional Phase: Action Planning | ||
| Homework 2 - Recognizing one’s possibilities | - Watching FeetEnergy-video, which introduces PA recommendations and gives tips for increasing PA and decreasing SB | - action planning, action self-efficacy |
| - FeetEnergy-homework leaflet, part 2: Making a list of self-selected ways to increase PA and to reduce SB and choosing at least one way for an immediate action plan | ||
| Lesson 3: Goal setting and action planning | - Watching the FeetEnergy –video in the classroom | - action self-efficacy |
| - Discussing in small groups or pairs about the self-selected ways for immediate action plan. | ||
| - Making the actions visible by writing them on the FeetEnergy-classroom poster | ||
| - Homework for the next lesson: Writing follow-up comments about the realization of the actions to the space provided in the poster (brief summary in the beginning of lesson 4) | ||
Fig. 3School-specific feedback views from SoftGIS responses
Evaluation questions and indicators of the intervention based on RE-AIM framework
| Dimension | Evaluation question | Indicator |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | What percentage of potentially eligible participants will take part and how representative are they? | - number and representativeness of the adolescents participating |
| Effectiveness | What impact did the intervention have on psychosocial factors of physical activity (PA) and sedentary behavior (SB)? | - social norms, intentions, self-efficacy |
| What impact did the intervention have on PA and SB? | - weekly frequency of active commuting to school | |
| - weekly frequency and minutes of leisure PA of various intensities | ||
| - weekly minutes of daily sitting | ||
| - meeting the daily recommendation of moderate-to-vigorous-intensity PA (1 hour on 7 | ||
| days per week) | ||
| - meeting the daily screen time recommendation (≤ 2 hours on 7 days per week) | ||
| What impact did the intervention have on parental interference with their child’s PA and SB? | - number of parents interfering with their child’s PA and SB | |
| Adoption | What percentage of settings and intervention agents participated and how representative were they? | - number and representativeness of the schools participating |
| Implementation | To what extent were the various intervention actions delivered as intended? | - number of teachers delivering the intervention |
| - number of health education lessons realized as intended | ||
| - proportion of students exposed to the intervention during the health education lessons | ||
| - number of parents recalling the parental FeetEnergy-leaflet | ||
| To what extent did the participants have adverse effects related to active commuting to school, LTPA and sitting? | - number of students with PA restrictions | |
| Maintenance | What were the long-term effects? (Individual level) | - same indicators as in effectiveness |
| To what extent were the intervention actions maintained? (Setting level) | - use of intervention material by the health education teachers 12 months after the | |
| intervention |