| Literature DB >> 34749683 |
Benjamin Domogalla1, Linda K Ko2,3, Reo Jones4, Wafaa Bin Ali5, Edgar Rodriguez6, Catherine Duggan7, Cynthia K Perry4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rural Latino children and adults are less active than urban and non-Latino counterparts. We examined physical activity (PA) patterns of rural Latino children and their parents, and explored parental beliefs about and reported barriers of Latino family physical activity. Latino families in a rural area in eastern Washington state, with children in grades 3-5 were included.Entities:
Keywords: Family; Latino/Hispanic; Physical activity; Rural; Sedentary
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34749683 PMCID: PMC8577017 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-12085-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Demographic information of participants
| Demographics | Child | Parent |
|---|---|---|
| 39.7 | 83.1 | |
| 9.26 | 37 | |
| Male | 13 | 1 |
| Female | 14 | 24 |
| BMI Percentile | 74.63 | N/A |
| BMI | N/A | 32.73 |
| Mexico | 23 | |
| USA | 2 | |
| Less than 14,999 | N/A | 5 |
| 15,000 to 34,999 | N/A | 14 |
| 35,000 to 50, 000 | N/A | 6 |
| Only Spanish | N/A | 11 |
| Spanish better than English | N/A | 9 |
| Both Spanish and English equally well | N/A | 3 |
| English better than Spanish | N/A | 1 |
| Only English | N/A | 1 |
Fig. 1Hours parents (n = 25) spent in each activity level per day. Light activity as defined by < 3 METs, moderate between 3 and 5.99 METS [19, 20]
Fig. 2Hours children (n = 27) spent in each activity level per day. Light activity as defined by < 3 METs, moderate between 3 and 5.99 METS [19, 20]
Accelerometer Data. Average minutes per hour children (n = 27). spent in each activity level by time of day (weekdays only). Light activity as defined by < 3 METs, moderate between 3 and 5.99 METS, and vigorous as 6.0–8.99 METs [19, 20]
| Before School (6-8 am) | During School (8 am-3 pm) | After School (3-6 pm) | Evening (6-10 pm) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Minutes per hour | SD | Mean Minutes per hour | SD | Mean Minutes per hour | SD | Mean Minutes per hour | SD | |
| 7.60 | 3.44 | 10.89 | 2.77 | 13.91 | 3.78 | 11.61 | 3.53 | |
| 5.05 | 2.31 | 8.82 | 2.51 | 17.79 | 2.17 | 6.82 | 1.99 | |
| 20.26 | 9.68 | 38.50 | 5.32 | 33.27 | 5.84 | 28.82 | 6.63 | |
Summary of Qualitative and Quantitative Findings
| Summary of Activity Patterns | Summary of Qualitative Findings | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| PA and families: Parents | ||
• Parents were mostly sedentary • No difference between weekday / weekends activity levels | • Reported being mostly inactive outside of work and household duties • Desired doing PA together as a family by visiting parks on weekends Barriers & Challenges • Lack of time • Work and family responsibilities • Lack of opportunities Perceptions & Beliefs • Identified PA as important for health and wellbeing | • Identified PA as important, yet reported significant barriers to being active on weekdays. • Wanted to be active on the weekends with their families, but minimal activity differences reported between weekends and weekdays. |
| PA and families: Children | ||
• Children were mostly sedentary. • Spent most time /hour in moderate activity during afterschool. Hours; 3 – 6 pm • Spent most time /hour in sedentary time during school hours. • No significant differences in PA levels between weekdays and weekends. | • Active with parents when biking, sports, walking and swimming. • Active in informal play during afterschool hours. Barriers and challenges • Lack of other children to be active with. • Health issues such as asthma. • Busy schedules. • Costs of organized team sports and transportation. Perceptions & Beliefs • Parents identified physical activity as important to their children’s health. Impact of technology/ excess screen-time: • Minimal parental limit-setting. • Screen-time as reward • Television in bedrooms • Meals with television | • Parents acknowledged barriers to their children being active despite their support of their children’s PA engagement. • Children engaged in informal play rather than organized team sports afterschool. • Children were on screens an average of 4–6 h per day. |