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Journal Article

Citation

Bronikowski M, Bronikowska M. Scand. J. Public Health 2011; 39(7): 704-713.

Affiliation

Department of Methodology of Teaching Physical Education, University School of Physical Education, 61-871 PoznaƄ, Poland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Associations of Public Health in the Nordic Countries Regions, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1403494811421059

PMID

21948996

Abstract

AIMS: In this paper we evaluate the sustainability of changes of involvement in physical activity. The paper examines the effectiveness of a model aiming at influencing the frequency of leisuretime physical activity, physical fitness and body constituency in youth. METHODS: The baseline of this study was a randomly selected sample of 13 year olds who participated in an intervention programme carried out in three schools in Poznan in 2005-08. From a total of 199 adolescent boys a subsample of 38 individuals from the experimental group and 34 from the control group were followed for 15 months after the interventional programme finished. From 170 girls, a subsample of 33 from the experimental group and 32 girls from the control group were also randomly selected for the follow-up study. Among the variables monitored were: physical fitness, body constituency, and frequency of leisuretime physical activity. All the variables were monitored in pre-test, post-test and follow-up examinations. RESULTS: It was established that 15 months after the end of the interventional programme boys and girls from the intervention groups maintained a higher level of leisuretime physical activity than their control group peers, and similarly in the case of selected health-related components of physical fitness. No distinctive differences were found in the case of body constituency, though, apart from muscle mass and the sum of skinfolds in girls. CONCLUSIONS: The study exposed an increase in leisuretime physical activity in time and a positive influence on selected components of health-related variables. The findings confirm the effectiveness of a multi-level intervention programme involving self-determined out-of-school physical activity planning for school-age youths, indicating the importance of personal and social context.


Language: en

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