• Preventive medicine · May 2004

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    Self-efficacy partially mediates the effect of a school-based physical-activity intervention among adolescent girls.

    • Rod K Dishman, Robert W Motl, Ruth Saunders, Gwen Felton, Dianne S Ward, Marsha Dowda, and Russell R Pate.
    • Department of Exercise Science, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-6554, USA. rdishman@coe.uga.edu
    • Prev Med. 2004 May 1; 38 (5): 628-36.

    BackgroundThis study evaluated the effects of the Lifestyle Education for Activity Program (LEAP), a comprehensive school-based intervention emphasizing changes in instruction and school environment, on variables derived from social-cognitive theory (SCT) as mediators of change in physical activity among black and white adolescent girls.MethodsTwenty-four high schools paired on enrollment size, racial composition, urban, suburban, or rural location, and class structure were randomized into control (n = 12) or experimental (n = 12) groups. There were 1038 girls in the control group and 1049 girls in the experimental group. The multicomponent intervention emphasized the enhancement of self-efficacy and development of behavioral skills by using curricular activities within physical education classes and health education instruction. The primary outcomes were self-efficacy, outcome-expectancy value, goal setting, satisfaction, and physical activity.ResultsLatent variable structural equation modeling indicated that: (1) self-efficacy and satisfaction exhibited synchronous, cross-sectional relationships with physical activity; (2) the intervention had direct effects on self-efficacy, goal setting, and physical activity; and (3) self-efficacy partially mediated the effect of intervention on physical activity.ConclusionsTo our knowledge, this study provides the first evidence from a randomized controlled trial that manipulation of self-efficacy results in increased physical activity among black and white adolescent girls. The results encourage the use of self-efficacy as a targeted, mediator variable in interventions designed to increase physical activity among girls.

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