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O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia

PURPOSE: Mass media campaigns are recommended in the “8 best investments for physical activity”. Despite large investment in the English “This Girl Can” (TGC) campaign since 2015, no independent evaluation data are published. This project reports on the TGC campaign licenced for use in Victoria, Aus...

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Autores principales: Bauman, Adrian, McNeil, Nicola, Nicholson, Matthew, O'Halloran, Paul, Randle, Erica, Seale, Emma-Louise, Stukas, Arthur
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10493987/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.124
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author Bauman, Adrian
McNeil, Nicola
Nicholson, Matthew
O'Halloran, Paul
Randle, Erica
Seale, Emma-Louise
Stukas, Arthur
author_facet Bauman, Adrian
McNeil, Nicola
Nicholson, Matthew
O'Halloran, Paul
Randle, Erica
Seale, Emma-Louise
Stukas, Arthur
author_sort Bauman, Adrian
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: Mass media campaigns are recommended in the “8 best investments for physical activity”. Despite large investment in the English “This Girl Can” (TGC) campaign since 2015, no independent evaluation data are published. This project reports on the TGC campaign licenced for use in Victoria, Australia from 2018 onwards. This project reports on the impact of the first wave of this media campaign on inactive Australian women’s attitudes and perceptions of physical activity. METHODS: Campaign impact was assessed using serial cohort and independent sample population surveys; two surveys were pre-campaign (Oct-2017 and March-2018), and the post-campaign survey following the first wave of TGC-Victoria mass media (May 2018). Primary analyses used the cohort sample of 818 inactive women followed across all three surveys. We measured campaign awareness and recall, and self-report measures of physical activity behaviour, perceptions of being judged and related psychological measures. Changes in perceptions of being judged and in reported physical activity were assessed in relation to campaign awareness over time. RESULTS: A third of women recalled the TGC-Victoria campaign. Reported physical activity increased by 0.19days/week following the campaign, especially among women aged over 50years. Feeling judged (3-items, Cronbach alpha=0.91) improved following the campaign (p < 0.01), as did a single-item feeling judged question (p = 0.08), with effect sizes=0.15 and 0.08 respectively. Theory of planned behavior and self-efficacy questions were unchanged but increases noted in self-determination (p < 0.01) and reductions in feeling embarrassed (p < 0.05). No differences were seen in the stage-of-change measure. Campaign awareness was not related to changes in physical activity or feeling judged or embarrassed while being active. CONCLUSIONS: The first year of the TGC-Victoria campaign resulted in good community awareness, and initial decreases in women feeling judged whilst being active, but these did not yet translate into substantial physical activity gains. Further waves of the TGC-V campaign have been conducted to further influence the perception of being judged while being active among inactive Victorian women. This longer term evidence is needed to justify the substantial costs of mass media to promote physical activity.
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spelling pubmed-104939872023-09-12 O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia Bauman, Adrian McNeil, Nicola Nicholson, Matthew O'Halloran, Paul Randle, Erica Seale, Emma-Louise Stukas, Arthur Eur J Public Health Parallel sessions PURPOSE: Mass media campaigns are recommended in the “8 best investments for physical activity”. Despite large investment in the English “This Girl Can” (TGC) campaign since 2015, no independent evaluation data are published. This project reports on the TGC campaign licenced for use in Victoria, Australia from 2018 onwards. This project reports on the impact of the first wave of this media campaign on inactive Australian women’s attitudes and perceptions of physical activity. METHODS: Campaign impact was assessed using serial cohort and independent sample population surveys; two surveys were pre-campaign (Oct-2017 and March-2018), and the post-campaign survey following the first wave of TGC-Victoria mass media (May 2018). Primary analyses used the cohort sample of 818 inactive women followed across all three surveys. We measured campaign awareness and recall, and self-report measures of physical activity behaviour, perceptions of being judged and related psychological measures. Changes in perceptions of being judged and in reported physical activity were assessed in relation to campaign awareness over time. RESULTS: A third of women recalled the TGC-Victoria campaign. Reported physical activity increased by 0.19days/week following the campaign, especially among women aged over 50years. Feeling judged (3-items, Cronbach alpha=0.91) improved following the campaign (p < 0.01), as did a single-item feeling judged question (p = 0.08), with effect sizes=0.15 and 0.08 respectively. Theory of planned behavior and self-efficacy questions were unchanged but increases noted in self-determination (p < 0.01) and reductions in feeling embarrassed (p < 0.05). No differences were seen in the stage-of-change measure. Campaign awareness was not related to changes in physical activity or feeling judged or embarrassed while being active. CONCLUSIONS: The first year of the TGC-Victoria campaign resulted in good community awareness, and initial decreases in women feeling judged whilst being active, but these did not yet translate into substantial physical activity gains. Further waves of the TGC-V campaign have been conducted to further influence the perception of being judged while being active among inactive Victorian women. This longer term evidence is needed to justify the substantial costs of mass media to promote physical activity. Oxford University Press 2023-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10493987/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.124 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Parallel sessions
Bauman, Adrian
McNeil, Nicola
Nicholson, Matthew
O'Halloran, Paul
Randle, Erica
Seale, Emma-Louise
Stukas, Arthur
O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title_full O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title_fullStr O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title_full_unstemmed O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title_short O.2.2-9 Initial effects of the “This Girl Can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in Victoria, Australia
title_sort o.2.2-9 initial effects of the “this girl can” physical activity and sport mass media campaign in victoria, australia
topic Parallel sessions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10493987/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.124
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