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A web-based physical activity promotion intervention for inactive parent-child dyads: Protocol for a randomized controlled trial

Phipps, Daniel; Green, Weldon Thomas; Aho, Reetta; Kettunen, Eeva; Biddle, Stuart; Hamilton, Kyra; Laukkanen, Arto; Aunola, Kaisa; Chan, Derwin King; Hankonen, Nelli; Hassandra, Mary; Kärkkäinen, Tommi; Kykyri, Virpi Liisa; Polet, Juho; Rhodes, Ryan; Ruiz, Montse C; Sääkslahti, Arja; Schneider, Jekaterina; Toivonen, Hanna Mari; Lintunen, Taru; Hagger, Martin; Knittle, Keegan

A web-based physical activity promotion intervention for inactive parent-child dyads: Protocol for a randomized controlled trial Thumbnail


Authors

Daniel Phipps

Weldon Thomas Green

Reetta Aho

Eeva Kettunen

Stuart Biddle

Kyra Hamilton

Arto Laukkanen

Kaisa Aunola

Derwin King Chan

Nelli Hankonen

Mary Hassandra

Tommi Kärkkäinen

Virpi Liisa Kykyri

Juho Polet

Ryan Rhodes

Montse C Ruiz

Arja Sääkslahti

Jekaterina Schneider

Hanna Mari Toivonen

Taru Lintunen

Martin Hagger

Keegan Knittle



Abstract

Background: Low levels of physical activity are associated with numerous adverse health outcomes, yet sedentary lifestyles are common among both children and adults. Physical activity levels tend to decline steeply among children aged between 8 and 12 years, even though children's behavioral patterns are largely governed by familial structures. Similarly, parents' activity levels have been generally reported as lower than those of nonparents of comparable age. For this reason, family-based physical activity promotion interventions are a potentially valuable and relatively underresearched method for mitigating physical activity declines as children develop into adolescents and for increasing physical activity in parents. Objective: This study aims to assess the efficacy, feasibility, and acceptability of a novel theory-based web-based physical activity promotion intervention among parent-child dyads in Finland who do not meet physical activity recommendations at baseline. Methods: Participants (target N=254) will be recruited from the general population using a panel company and advertisements on social media and randomly assigned to either an immediate intervention group or a waitlist control group. The intervention consists of 4 web-based group workshops over the course of 10 weeks, web-based tasks and resources, and a social support chat group. Data on physical activity behavior and constructs from the integrated behavior change model will be collected through self-report surveys assessing physical activity, autonomy support, autonomous motivation, attitude, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control, intention, self-monitoring, habit, and accelerometer measurements at baseline, post intervention, and 3 months post intervention. Exit interviews with participants will assess the feasibility and acceptability of the intervention procedures. Results: This study will reveal whether the intervention changes leisure-time physical activity among intervention participants relative to the control group and will examine the intervention's effects on important theoretical predictors of physical activity. It will also yield data that can be used to refine intervention materials and inform further implementation. Trial recruitment commenced in September 2023, and data collection should be completed by December 2024. Conclusions: The planned intervention has potential implications for both theory and practice. Practically, the use of an entirely web-based intervention may have scalable future uses for improving physical activity in 2 key populations, while also potentially informing on the value of dyadic, family-based strategies for encouraging an active lifestyle as an alternative to strategies that target either parents or children independently. Further, by assessing change in psychological constructs alongside potential change in behavior, the intervention also allows for important tests of theory regarding which constructs are most linked to favorable behavior change outcomes.

Citation

Phipps, D., Green, W. T., Aho, R., Kettunen, E., Biddle, S., Hamilton, K., …Knittle, K. (2024). A web-based physical activity promotion intervention for inactive parent-child dyads: Protocol for a randomized controlled trial. JMIR Research Protocols, 13(1), Article e55960. https://doi.org/10.2196/55960

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 2, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 21, 2024
Publication Date Mar 21, 2024
Deposit Date Apr 10, 2024
Publicly Available Date Apr 10, 2024
Journal JMIR Research Protocols
Electronic ISSN 1929-0748
Publisher JMIR Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 1
Article Number e55960
DOI https://doi.org/10.2196/55960
Keywords theory of planned behavior, dyadic behavior change, intervention, physical activity, family behavior change
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11883758

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