Cargando…

ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model

BACKGROUND: ParticipACTION was a pervasive communication campaign that promoted physical activity in the Canadian population for three decades. According to McGuire's hierarchy-of-effects model (HOEM), this campaign should influence physical activity through intermediate mediators such as belie...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Spence, John C, Brawley, Lawrence R, Craig, Cora Lynn, Plotnikoff, Ronald C, Tremblay, Mark S, Bauman, Adrian, Faulkner, Guy EJ, Chad, Karen, Clark, Marianne I
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2795738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19995456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-85
_version_ 1782175443399475200
author Spence, John C
Brawley, Lawrence R
Craig, Cora Lynn
Plotnikoff, Ronald C
Tremblay, Mark S
Bauman, Adrian
Faulkner, Guy EJ
Chad, Karen
Clark, Marianne I
author_facet Spence, John C
Brawley, Lawrence R
Craig, Cora Lynn
Plotnikoff, Ronald C
Tremblay, Mark S
Bauman, Adrian
Faulkner, Guy EJ
Chad, Karen
Clark, Marianne I
author_sort Spence, John C
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: ParticipACTION was a pervasive communication campaign that promoted physical activity in the Canadian population for three decades. According to McGuire's hierarchy-of-effects model (HOEM), this campaign should influence physical activity through intermediate mediators such as beliefs and intention. Also, when such media campaigns occur, knowledge gaps often develop within the population about the messages being conveyed. The purposes of this study were to (a) determine the current awareness of ParticipACTION campaigns among Canadians; (b) confirm if awareness of the ParticipACTION initiative varied as a function of levels of education and household income; and, (c) to examine whether awareness of ParticipACTION was associated with physical activity related beliefs, intentions, and leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) as suggested by the HOEM. Specifically, we tested a model including awareness of ParticipACTION (unprompted, prompted), outcome expectations, self-efficacy, intention, and physical activity status. METHODS: A population-based survey was conducted on 4,650 Canadians over a period of 6 months from August, 2007 to February, 2008 (response rate = 49%). The survey consisted of a set of additional questions on the 2007 Physical Activity Monitor (PAM). Our module on the PAM included questions related to awareness and knowledge of ParticipACTION. Weighted logistic models were constructed to test the knowledge gap hypotheses and to examine whether awareness was associated with physical activity related beliefs (i.e., outcome expectations, self-efficacy), intention, and LTPA. All analyses included those respondents who were 20 years of age and older in 2007/2008 (N = 4424). RESULTS: Approximately 8% of Canadians were still aware of ParticipACTION unprompted and 82% were aware when prompted. Both education and income were significant correlates of awareness among Canadians. The odds of people being aware of ParticipACTION were greater if they were more educated and reported higher income. Awareness of ParticipACTION was also associated with outcome expectations, self-efficacy, intention, and LTPA status. CONCLUSION: Awareness of ParticipACTION is associated with LTPA. Knowledge gaps in awareness are associated with level of education and household income. Thus, future promotion campaigns should include specific strategies to target different segments of the population, especially people who are living in deprived conditions with lower levels of education.
format Text
id pubmed-2795738
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27957382009-12-18 ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model Spence, John C Brawley, Lawrence R Craig, Cora Lynn Plotnikoff, Ronald C Tremblay, Mark S Bauman, Adrian Faulkner, Guy EJ Chad, Karen Clark, Marianne I Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act Research BACKGROUND: ParticipACTION was a pervasive communication campaign that promoted physical activity in the Canadian population for three decades. According to McGuire's hierarchy-of-effects model (HOEM), this campaign should influence physical activity through intermediate mediators such as beliefs and intention. Also, when such media campaigns occur, knowledge gaps often develop within the population about the messages being conveyed. The purposes of this study were to (a) determine the current awareness of ParticipACTION campaigns among Canadians; (b) confirm if awareness of the ParticipACTION initiative varied as a function of levels of education and household income; and, (c) to examine whether awareness of ParticipACTION was associated with physical activity related beliefs, intentions, and leisure-time physical activity (LTPA) as suggested by the HOEM. Specifically, we tested a model including awareness of ParticipACTION (unprompted, prompted), outcome expectations, self-efficacy, intention, and physical activity status. METHODS: A population-based survey was conducted on 4,650 Canadians over a period of 6 months from August, 2007 to February, 2008 (response rate = 49%). The survey consisted of a set of additional questions on the 2007 Physical Activity Monitor (PAM). Our module on the PAM included questions related to awareness and knowledge of ParticipACTION. Weighted logistic models were constructed to test the knowledge gap hypotheses and to examine whether awareness was associated with physical activity related beliefs (i.e., outcome expectations, self-efficacy), intention, and LTPA. All analyses included those respondents who were 20 years of age and older in 2007/2008 (N = 4424). RESULTS: Approximately 8% of Canadians were still aware of ParticipACTION unprompted and 82% were aware when prompted. Both education and income were significant correlates of awareness among Canadians. The odds of people being aware of ParticipACTION were greater if they were more educated and reported higher income. Awareness of ParticipACTION was also associated with outcome expectations, self-efficacy, intention, and LTPA status. CONCLUSION: Awareness of ParticipACTION is associated with LTPA. Knowledge gaps in awareness are associated with level of education and household income. Thus, future promotion campaigns should include specific strategies to target different segments of the population, especially people who are living in deprived conditions with lower levels of education. BioMed Central 2009-12-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2795738/ /pubmed/19995456 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-85 Text en Copyright ©2009 Spence et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Spence, John C
Brawley, Lawrence R
Craig, Cora Lynn
Plotnikoff, Ronald C
Tremblay, Mark S
Bauman, Adrian
Faulkner, Guy EJ
Chad, Karen
Clark, Marianne I
ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title_full ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title_fullStr ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title_full_unstemmed ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title_short ParticipACTION: Awareness of the participACTION campaign among Canadian adults - Examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
title_sort participaction: awareness of the participaction campaign among canadian adults - examining the knowledge gap hypothesis and a hierarchy-of-effects model
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2795738/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19995456
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-85
work_keys_str_mv AT spencejohnc participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT brawleylawrencer participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT craigcoralynn participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT plotnikoffronaldc participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT tremblaymarks participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT baumanadrian participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT faulknerguyej participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT chadkaren participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel
AT clarkmariannei participactionawarenessoftheparticipactioncampaignamongcanadianadultsexaminingtheknowledgegaphypothesisandahierarchyofeffectsmodel