Parental School Involvement on Physical Activity and Screen Time Among Middle and High School Students

J. Greer, Kiran Thapa, Jesse A. McNulty, Janani Thapa
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Abstract

Background: High levels of sedentary activity and low levels of physical activity have led to an increase in childhood obesity. A reduction of sedentary behavior and the promotion of an active lifestyle positively impacts weight status of children. A child may modify their behavior through direct interventions from their parents, such as enforcement of rules or guided activities, or through broad interventions, by expressing their values and modeling behavior. Current research does not establish if broad or specific parental involvement has a greater effect on healthy behavior. Our group sought to support existing evidence that parental involvement directly impacts behavior that reduces the likelihood of childhood obesity and determines if broad or specific parental involvement had a greater impact on healthy behavior. Methods: The study population included all children grades 6-12 who completed the Georgia Student Health Survey 2.0. Survey questions from 674,354 students in Georgia were used for the analysis. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was conducted to derive a composite measure. Two factors were generated, broad parental involvement and specific parental involvement. Mixed-effects logistic regression was run using physical activity as the dependent variable and the two composite measures of parental involvement as predictors. The same mixed-effects logistic regression was performed using screen time as the dependent variable. Results: Both measures of parental involvement showed a statistically significant positive relationship with physical activity. Both measures of parental involvement were significantly associated with screen time. Conclusions: Results suggest that specific parental involvement is associated with an increase in weekly physical activity and a decrease in daily screen time. Increasing physical activity and reducing screen time have demonstrated clear reductions in the rate of obesity amongst children. To improve healthy behavior and reduce the likelihood of childhood obesity, parents should be directly involved in their child’s school behavior.
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家长学校参与对中学生体育活动和屏幕时间的影响
背景:高水平的久坐活动和低水平的体育活动导致儿童肥胖的增加。减少久坐行为和促进积极的生活方式会对儿童的体重状况产生积极影响。孩子可以通过父母的直接干预来改变他们的行为,例如执行规则或指导活动,或者通过广泛的干预,通过表达他们的价值观和模仿行为。目前的研究并没有确定父母的广泛或具体参与是否对健康行为有更大的影响。我们的小组试图支持现有的证据,即父母的参与直接影响降低儿童肥胖可能性的行为,并确定父母的广泛或特定参与是否对健康行为有更大的影响。方法:研究人群包括所有完成佐治亚州学生健康调查2.0的6-12年级儿童。来自乔治亚州674354名学生的调查问题被用于分析。进行了探索性因素分析(EFA),得出了一个综合衡量标准。产生了两个因素,即父母的广泛参与和父母的具体参与。使用体力活动作为因变量,父母参与的两个复合指标作为预测因素进行混合效应逻辑回归。使用屏幕时间作为因变量进行相同的混合效应逻辑回归。结果:父母参与的两项指标均与体育活动呈正相关。父母参与的两项指标都与屏幕时间显著相关。结论:研究结果表明,父母的特殊参与与每周体育活动的增加和每日屏幕时间的减少有关。增加体育活动和减少屏幕时间表明,儿童肥胖率明显降低。为了改善健康行为,降低儿童肥胖的可能性,父母应该直接参与孩子的学校行为。
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