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Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Remotely delivered interventions are promising for reaching large numbers of people, though few have targeted multiple levels of influence such as schools and families. This study evaluated two versions (arms) of a remotely delivered classroom-based physical activity (CBPA) intervention. One arm sol...

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Autores principales: Forseth, Bethany, Ortega, Adrian, Hibbing, Paul R, Moon, Mallory, Steel, Chelsea, Singh, Mehar, Kollu, Avinash, Miller, Bryce, Miller, Maurice, Staggs, Vincent, Calvert, Hannah, Davis, Ann M., Carlson, Jordan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JHEAL 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37771566
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author Forseth, Bethany
Ortega, Adrian
Hibbing, Paul R
Moon, Mallory
Steel, Chelsea
Singh, Mehar
Kollu, Avinash
Miller, Bryce
Miller, Maurice
Staggs, Vincent
Calvert, Hannah
Davis, Ann M.
Carlson, Jordan
author_facet Forseth, Bethany
Ortega, Adrian
Hibbing, Paul R
Moon, Mallory
Steel, Chelsea
Singh, Mehar
Kollu, Avinash
Miller, Bryce
Miller, Maurice
Staggs, Vincent
Calvert, Hannah
Davis, Ann M.
Carlson, Jordan
author_sort Forseth, Bethany
collection PubMed
description Remotely delivered interventions are promising for reaching large numbers of people, though few have targeted multiple levels of influence such as schools and families. This study evaluated two versions (arms) of a remotely delivered classroom-based physical activity (CBPA) intervention. One arm solely included remote CBPA; the other included remote CBPA and mobile health (mHealth) family supports. Six schools were randomized to CBPA or CBPA+Family. Both arms were remotely delivered for seven weeks. CBPA+Family added behavior change tools delivered via text messages and newsletters to caregiver/child dyads. Garmin devices measured moderate-to-vigorous activity (MVPA) in both arms and were used for goal setting/monitoring in the CBPA+Family arm (integrated with the text messages). Caregivers completed surveys evaluating intervention acceptability. 53 participants (CBPA n=35; CBPA+Family n=18; 9.7±0.7 years) were included. Increases in MVPA were similar between arms, showing a pre-post effect of the CBPA but no additional effect of family supports. MVPA was low at baseline and during the first 3 weeks (CBPA 7.5±3.1 minutes/day; CBPA+Family 7.9±2.7 minutes/day) and increased by Weeks 6–8 (CBPA 56.8±34.2 minutes/day; CBPA+Family 49.2±18.7 minutes/day). Approximately 90% of caregivers reported high satisfaction with the added family support content. CBPA+Family participants wore the Garmin later into the study period. Remote delivery of CBPA appears feasible and effective for supporting increases in children’s MVPA. Adding family supports to school-based interventions appears acceptable and may support engagement, demonstrating promise for more multilevel/multi-setting interventions, though the multilevel intervention was not more effective than the single-level intervention in increasing children’s MVPA.
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spelling pubmed-105220082023-09-28 Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic Forseth, Bethany Ortega, Adrian Hibbing, Paul R Moon, Mallory Steel, Chelsea Singh, Mehar Kollu, Avinash Miller, Bryce Miller, Maurice Staggs, Vincent Calvert, Hannah Davis, Ann M. Carlson, Jordan J Healthy Eat Act Living Peer Reviewed Research Remotely delivered interventions are promising for reaching large numbers of people, though few have targeted multiple levels of influence such as schools and families. This study evaluated two versions (arms) of a remotely delivered classroom-based physical activity (CBPA) intervention. One arm solely included remote CBPA; the other included remote CBPA and mobile health (mHealth) family supports. Six schools were randomized to CBPA or CBPA+Family. Both arms were remotely delivered for seven weeks. CBPA+Family added behavior change tools delivered via text messages and newsletters to caregiver/child dyads. Garmin devices measured moderate-to-vigorous activity (MVPA) in both arms and were used for goal setting/monitoring in the CBPA+Family arm (integrated with the text messages). Caregivers completed surveys evaluating intervention acceptability. 53 participants (CBPA n=35; CBPA+Family n=18; 9.7±0.7 years) were included. Increases in MVPA were similar between arms, showing a pre-post effect of the CBPA but no additional effect of family supports. MVPA was low at baseline and during the first 3 weeks (CBPA 7.5±3.1 minutes/day; CBPA+Family 7.9±2.7 minutes/day) and increased by Weeks 6–8 (CBPA 56.8±34.2 minutes/day; CBPA+Family 49.2±18.7 minutes/day). Approximately 90% of caregivers reported high satisfaction with the added family support content. CBPA+Family participants wore the Garmin later into the study period. Remote delivery of CBPA appears feasible and effective for supporting increases in children’s MVPA. Adding family supports to school-based interventions appears acceptable and may support engagement, demonstrating promise for more multilevel/multi-setting interventions, though the multilevel intervention was not more effective than the single-level intervention in increasing children’s MVPA. JHEAL 2021-12-10 /pmc/articles/PMC10522008/ /pubmed/37771566 Text en © JHEAL, 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0).
spellingShingle Peer Reviewed Research
Forseth, Bethany
Ortega, Adrian
Hibbing, Paul R
Moon, Mallory
Steel, Chelsea
Singh, Mehar
Kollu, Avinash
Miller, Bryce
Miller, Maurice
Staggs, Vincent
Calvert, Hannah
Davis, Ann M.
Carlson, Jordan
Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_full Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_fullStr Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_full_unstemmed Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_short Adding Family Digital Supports to Classroom-Based Physical Activity Interventions to Target In- and Out-of-School Activity: An Evaluation of the Stay Active Intervention during the COVID-19 Pandemic
title_sort adding family digital supports to classroom-based physical activity interventions to target in- and out-of-school activity: an evaluation of the stay active intervention during the covid-19 pandemic
topic Peer Reviewed Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10522008/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37771566
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