TY - JOUR PY - 2010// TI - Correlates of Children and Parents Being Physically Active Together JO - Journal of physical activity and health A1 - Lee, Sarah M. A1 - Nihiser, Allison A1 - Strouse, Darcy A1 - Das, Barnali A1 - Michael, Shannon A1 - Huhman, Marian SP - 776 EP - 783 VL - 7 IS - 6 N2 - BACKGROUND: Co-physical activity (between parents and children), as an outcome variable, and its correlates have not been examined previously. The purpose of this study was to investigate correlates of co-physical activity among a nationally representative sample of 9- to 13-year-old children and their parents. METHODS: Data were from the 2004 Youth Media Campaign Longitudinal Survey, a national survey of 5177 child-parent dyads. Parents of 9- to 13-year-old children were asked to report co-physical activity. Parents and children responded to a series of sociodemographic, behavioral, and psychosocial measures. Co-physical activity was treated as a dichotomous variable (ie, some or none). Logistic regression was used to assess associations of correlates directly and possible interactions between correlates. RESULTS: More than three-quarters of parents reported co-physical activity at least 1 day in the prior week. Age, race/ethnicity, sports team participation, eating meals together, parental confidence to influence the child's organized activity, and the child's perception of parental support were significantly associated with co-physical activity. CONCLUSION: The majority of respondents reported participating in co-physical activity, and multiple sociodemographic, behavioral, and psychosocial correlates were significantly associated with co-physical activity. This study provides insight for physical activity interventions that might involve parents.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1543-3080 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -