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  Vol. 160 No. 12, December 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Effects of a Life Skills Intervention for Increasing Physical Activity in Adolescent Girls

Deborah Rohm Young, PhD; Jennie A. Phillips, MS; Tao Yu, MS; Jennifer A. Haythornthwaite, PhD

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2006;160:1255-1261.

Background  Although adolescence is a time when physical activity levels decline, few interventions have targeted high school–aged girls in the school setting.

Objective  To evaluate the effects of a life skills–oriented physical activity intervention for increasing overall physical activity in high school–aged girls.

Design  Randomized controlled trial.

Setting  Baltimore magnet high school.

Participants  A total of 221 ninth-grade girls, 83.0% of whom were African American.

Intervention  Participants were randomized to an 8-month physical intervention conducted in physical education class or to a standard physical education class (control).

Main Outcome Measures  Self-reported estimated daily energy expenditure (physical activity), self-reported sedentary activities (television viewing and computer or Internet use), cardiorespiratory fitness, and selected cardiovascular disease risk factors.

Results  Intervention classes spent 46.9% of physical education class time in moderate to vigorous activity compared with 30.5% of time for control classes (P<.001). There were no significant between-treatment group differences for mean daily energy expenditure (P = .93), moderate-intensity energy expenditure (P = .77), or hard to very hard energy expenditure (P = .69). The proportion of participants who spent 3 or more hours viewing television during school days declined from 22.3% to 17.0% in the intervention group, but remained at 26.7% for the control group (P = .03). Both groups improved their cardiorespiratory fitness (P<.001).

Conclusion  A life skills–oriented physical education curriculum may need to be combined with other approaches to increase the magnitude of effects on physical activity behavior in predominantly African American high school–aged girls.


Author Affiliations: Department of Kinesiology, University of Maryland, College Park (Dr Young and Mss Phillips and Yu); and Department of Psychiatry, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md (Dr Haythornthwaite).



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Process evaluation results from a school- and community-linked intervention: the Trial of Activity for Adolescent Girls (TAAG)
Young et al.
Health Educ Res 2008;0:cyn029v1-cyn029.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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