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Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study

School-based multi-component educational interventions have been encouraged to improve children’s movement behaviors. The present study evaluates the effect of the Globe Trotter Initiative on physical activity (PA) level, sedentary time, physical fitness and activity preferences in primary school ch...

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Autores principales: Fillon, Alicia, Fearnbach, Nicole, Vieira, Stéphanie, Gélinier, Jade, Bagot, Sarah, Bailly, Mélina, Boscaro, Audrey, Pélissier, Léna, Siroux, Julie, Grasteau, Vincent, Bertsch, Jean, Pereira, Bruno, Duclos, Martine, Lambert, Céline, Thivel, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9859473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36673845
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021089
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author Fillon, Alicia
Fearnbach, Nicole
Vieira, Stéphanie
Gélinier, Jade
Bagot, Sarah
Bailly, Mélina
Boscaro, Audrey
Pélissier, Léna
Siroux, Julie
Grasteau, Vincent
Bertsch, Jean
Pereira, Bruno
Duclos, Martine
Lambert, Céline
Thivel, David
author_facet Fillon, Alicia
Fearnbach, Nicole
Vieira, Stéphanie
Gélinier, Jade
Bagot, Sarah
Bailly, Mélina
Boscaro, Audrey
Pélissier, Léna
Siroux, Julie
Grasteau, Vincent
Bertsch, Jean
Pereira, Bruno
Duclos, Martine
Lambert, Céline
Thivel, David
author_sort Fillon, Alicia
collection PubMed
description School-based multi-component educational interventions have been encouraged to improve children’s movement behaviors. The present study evaluates the effect of the Globe Trotter Initiative on physical activity (PA) level, sedentary time, physical fitness and activity preferences in primary school children. A total of 361 children (9–10 years) participated in this cluster-randomized trial. Nine schools were randomized as control (CON, 121 children) or Globe Trotter schools (GT, 240 children). Physical fitness, body composition, anthropometric characteristics, PA level, sedentary behaviors, physical self-perception, and activity preferences were evaluated at baseline (T0) and after the one-month intervention (T1). Grip strength performance and overall completion time of the obstacle course show a significant time effect (p < 0.001) in both groups (no group effect). PA level and physical self-perception did not significantly show time nor group effects. The sedentary behavior score displays a significant “time × group” interaction effect (p = 0.04) with a significant reduction between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The explicit liking for sedentary activities shows a significant “time × group” interaction (p = 0.02) with a significant decrease between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The explicit wanting for sedentary activities show a significant “time × group” interaction (p = 0.02) with a significant decrease between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The short-term, multi-component, behavioral, educational GT intervention had beneficial effects on primary-school-aged children’s sedentary time and implicit preference for physical over sedentary activities.
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spelling pubmed-98594732023-01-21 Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study Fillon, Alicia Fearnbach, Nicole Vieira, Stéphanie Gélinier, Jade Bagot, Sarah Bailly, Mélina Boscaro, Audrey Pélissier, Léna Siroux, Julie Grasteau, Vincent Bertsch, Jean Pereira, Bruno Duclos, Martine Lambert, Céline Thivel, David Int J Environ Res Public Health Article School-based multi-component educational interventions have been encouraged to improve children’s movement behaviors. The present study evaluates the effect of the Globe Trotter Initiative on physical activity (PA) level, sedentary time, physical fitness and activity preferences in primary school children. A total of 361 children (9–10 years) participated in this cluster-randomized trial. Nine schools were randomized as control (CON, 121 children) or Globe Trotter schools (GT, 240 children). Physical fitness, body composition, anthropometric characteristics, PA level, sedentary behaviors, physical self-perception, and activity preferences were evaluated at baseline (T0) and after the one-month intervention (T1). Grip strength performance and overall completion time of the obstacle course show a significant time effect (p < 0.001) in both groups (no group effect). PA level and physical self-perception did not significantly show time nor group effects. The sedentary behavior score displays a significant “time × group” interaction effect (p = 0.04) with a significant reduction between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The explicit liking for sedentary activities shows a significant “time × group” interaction (p = 0.02) with a significant decrease between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The explicit wanting for sedentary activities show a significant “time × group” interaction (p = 0.02) with a significant decrease between T0 and T1 in the GT group only (p < 0.001). The short-term, multi-component, behavioral, educational GT intervention had beneficial effects on primary-school-aged children’s sedentary time and implicit preference for physical over sedentary activities. MDPI 2023-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC9859473/ /pubmed/36673845 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021089 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Fillon, Alicia
Fearnbach, Nicole
Vieira, Stéphanie
Gélinier, Jade
Bagot, Sarah
Bailly, Mélina
Boscaro, Audrey
Pélissier, Léna
Siroux, Julie
Grasteau, Vincent
Bertsch, Jean
Pereira, Bruno
Duclos, Martine
Lambert, Céline
Thivel, David
Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title_full Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title_fullStr Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title_full_unstemmed Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title_short Changes in Sedentary Time and Implicit Preference for Sedentary Behaviors in Response to a One-Month Educational Intervention in Primary School Children: Results from the Globe Trotter Pilot Cluster-Randomized Study
title_sort changes in sedentary time and implicit preference for sedentary behaviors in response to a one-month educational intervention in primary school children: results from the globe trotter pilot cluster-randomized study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9859473/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36673845
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20021089
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