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Mediating effects of group cohesion on physical activity and diet in women of color: health is power.

Authors :
Lee RE
O'Connor DP
Smith-Ray R
Mama SK
Medina AV
Reese-Smith JY
Banda JA
Layne CS
Brosnan M
Cubbin C
McMillan T
Estabrooks PA
Lee, Rebecca E
O'Connor, Daniel P
Smith-Ray, Renae
Mama, Scherezade K
Medina, Ashley V
Reese-Smith, Jacqueline Y
Banda, Jorge A
Layne, Charles S
Source :
American Journal of Health Promotion. Mar/Apr2012, Vol. 26 Issue 4, pe116-25. 1p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

<bold>Purpose: </bold>To determine the effects and mediating factors of a physical activity (PA) or vegetable and fruit (VF) group cohesion intervention.<bold>Design: </bold>Longitudinal design.<bold>Setting: </bold>Harris County and Travis County, Texas.<bold>Participants: </bold>Community-dwelling African-American and Hispanic or Latina women.<bold>Intervention: </bold>Three hundred ten women were randomized to a PA (n  =  204) or VF (n  =  106) intervention group. Women met in groups six times over the course of 6 months and were exposed to a group cohesion intervention to promote walking or to increase VF consumption.<bold>Measures: </bold>Women completed the International PA Questionnaire, National Cancer Institute VF and fat screeners, PA Group Environment Questionnaire, and 7-day accelerometer protocol at baseline and post-intervention.<bold>Analyses: </bold>The direct and mediated effects of the intervention on outcomes were evaluated using a mediational chain model, controlling for baseline values and covariates using path analysis.<bold>Results: </bold>Women were middle aged (mean  =  44.4 years) and overweight or obese (mean body mass index  =  34.0 kg/m(2)). PA increased and fat consumption decreased for both groups, whereas VF consumption increased for women in VF group only (all p < .05). Increased task cohesion led to hypothesized increases in psychosocial factors in the PA group but not to behavioral changes.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Group cohesion interventions may have psychological and physical health benefits for African-American and Hispanic or Latina women, but refinement of measures and intervention delivery is needed to determine whether hypothesized mediational pathways are valid. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08901171
Volume :
26
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Health Promotion
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
108166595
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.4278/ajhp.101215-QUAN-400