Direct Home Observations of the Prompting of Physical Activity in Sedentary and Active Mexican-and Anglo-American Children — John P. Elder (1998) | RDL Network
Direct Home Observations of the Prompting of Physical Activity in Sedentary and Active Mexican-and Anglo-American Children
Journal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics 19(1): 26-30
Article 1998 English
Authors
JE
John P. Elder
SB
Shelia L. Broyles
TM
Thomas L. McKenzie
Abstract
1 min read
Social interactions are important correlates of physical activity in children. Previous studies used global measures; the present study examined the influence of specific social interactions on immediate physical activity in children with data obtained from the Behaviors of Eating and Activity for Child Health: Evaluation System (BEACHES). The study examined parental and peer prompting of physical activity at home among 178 Mexican-American and 113 Anglo-American children at age 4 years and again at age 6.5 years. Most activity prompts came from adults interacting with children when they were sedentary. A reduction in the frequency of prompts from baseline to follow-up occurred in the prompter group (adult or child peer), gender, ethnicity, and preprompted activity level categories. Children's responses to these prompts showed that as they aged, they seemed to rely less on the interpersonal (especially adult) aspects of their environment for cues to be more active.
Philip R. Nader, James Sallis, Shelia L. Broyles, Thomas L. McKenzie, Charles C. Berry, Thomas B. Davis, Michelle Zive, John P. Elder, Gail C. Frank-Spohrer
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