7 results
Search Results
2. [Physical Activity guidelines in Canada: has publication had an effect?].
- Author
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Cameron C, Craig CL, Bull FC, and Bauman A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Age Factors, Aged, Canada, Education, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Population, Sex Factors, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, Exercise physiology, Guidelines as Topic, Health Education statistics & numerical data, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the reach of different versions of Canada's physical activity guide (CPAG) and their impacts, including immediate effects (awareness, knowledge, beliefs, future intention to be active, first steps towards behavioural change) and population levels of physical activity. The analysis is based on eligible adults aged 18 years and older (n = 8892) included in the 2003 Physical Activity Monitor (PAM) survey. The 2003 PAM was a cross-sectional, telephone interview of a representative population sample. Secular trends of Canadians aged 12 years and older were examined, using representative samples from the National Population Health and Canadian Community Health Surveys. Unprompted recall of any guidelines for physical activity was very low (4%), whereas prompted recall of the CPAG was higher (37%). Unprompted and prompted recall were higher among women and high-income earners, and increased with level of education. Behaviours associated with "seeking information" and "initiating action" were associated with unprompted and prompted recall. Beliefs about the benefits of physical activity and intention to be active were also associated with prompted recall. Unprompted CPAG recall, knowledge about the amount of activity required to meet the CPAG, intention to be active, "seeking information", and "initiating action" were associated with being "sufficiently active". The CPAG is an appropriate set of public health guidelines or recommendations around physical activity. The low unprompted recall rate points to the need for a coordinated, well-funded approach to communication of these guidelines, involving governmental and non-governmental partners and intermediaries in municipalities, schools, workplaces, and the recreational, public health, and health-care systems.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. [Physical activity guidelines for Canadians: strategies for dissemination of the message, expectations for change and evaluation].
- Author
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Brawley LR and Latimer AE
- Subjects
- Canada, Communication, Humans, Mass Media, Social Marketing, Guidelines as Topic, Health Promotion organization & administration, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
Physical activity guidelines offer evidence-based behavioural benchmarks that relate to reduced risk of morbidity and mortality if people adhere to them. Essentially, the guidelines tell people what to do, but not why and how they should do it. Thus, to motivate adherence, messages that translate guidelines should convey not only how much physical activity one should attempt and why it is recommended, but also how to achieve such a recommendation. Canada's physical activity guides exemplify how guidelines can be translated. This paper (i) provides a brief overview of the challenges encountered in creating the existing guides and (ii) highlights important practical issues and empirical evidence that should be considered in the future when translating guidelines into messages and disseminating these messages. We draw on the successes of past efforts to translate the goals of physical activity guidelines and on recent literature on messages and media campaigns to make recommendations. Information to motivate people to move toward the goals in physical activity guidelines should be translated into a set of messages that are informative, thought provoking, and persuasive. These messages should be disseminated to the public via a multi-phase social-marketing campaign that is carefully planned and thoroughly evaluated.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. [Physical activity guidelines in Canada: context, process and development].
- Author
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Sharratt MT and Hearst WE
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Canada, Child, Humans, Young Adult, Exercise physiology, Guidelines as Topic standards, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
This historical background paper chronicles the major events leading to the development of Canada's physical activity guides (for children, youth, adults, and older adults). The paper outlines the process and the steps used, including information (where applicable) regarding national partners, project administration, Health Canada communications, product development, endorsement, distribution and implementation, collateral activities, media relations and evaluation framework. Brief summaries of the science that led to the recommended guidelines are included. The paper also summarizes the various physical activity guide assessment and evaluation projects and their findings, particularly as they relate to research carried out on Canada's physical activity guides for children and youth (and the associated support resources).
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. [Guidelines for physical activity in children and young people].
- Author
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Janssen I
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Animals, Canada, Child, Health, Humans, Young Adult, Exercise physiology, Guidelines as Topic, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
The aim of this review is to provide a scientific update on evidence related to the biological and psycho-social health benefits of physical activity in school-aged children and youth. To accomplish this aim, the first part of the paper reviews existing physical activity guidelines for school-aged children and youth, with an emphasis placed on how Canada's guidelines compare and contrast with those of other countries and organizations. The paper then provides an overview of physical activity levels of Canadian children and youth, which indicates that few Canadian youngsters meet current physical activity recommendations. The next section of the paper summarizes the literature that informs how much physical activity is required to promote health and well-being in children and youth. The paper then provides suggestions on modifications that could be made to Canada's physical activity guidelines for children and youth. Specifically, consideration should be given to setting both minimal (>/=60 min/d) and optimal (up to several hours per day) physical activity targets. The final section identifies future research needs. In this section, a need is noted for comprehensive dose-response studies of physical activity and health in the paediatric age group.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [Guides and guidelines for physical activity for Canadians: facts and future].
- Author
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Tremblay MS, Shephard RJ, Brawley LR, Cameron C, Craig CL, Duggan M, Esliger DW, Hearst W, Hicks A, Janssen I, Katzmarzyk PT, Latimer AE, McGuire A, Paterson DH, Sharratt M, Spence JC, Timmons B, Warburton D, Young TK, and Zehr L
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Canada, Child, Child, Preschool, Disabled Persons, Ethnicity, Health Promotion, Humans, Young Adult, Exercise physiology, Guidelines as Topic, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
This article summarizes the main findings from the papers included in this journal supplement. It consolidates the evidence currently available to inform and advance the development of physical activity guidelines for Canadians, and it highlights the specific needs of various population subgroups. The challenges of translating guideline information into effective and persuasive physical activity messages, of campaigns to disseminate messages and of related evaluations are underlined. Recommendations on how to proceed are based on the evidence base provided by this series of papers; the immediate next steps mandated by this initiative are outlined and priorities for future research are indicated.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. [Research illuminating the guidelines for physical activity in Canada: Introduction].
- Author
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Tremblay MS, Shepard RJ, and Brawley LR
- Subjects
- Behavior, Canada, Communication, Health Education, Humans, Guidelines as Topic standards, Motor Activity physiology
- Abstract
The Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology (CSEP), in partnership with Health Canada and others, released Canada's first physical activity guide for adults in 1998, with specific versions for older adults in 1999 and for children and youth in 2002. Research in the physical activity sciences (e.g., basic science, behavioural assessment, dose-response relationships, epidemiology, health messaging, physical activity measurement) has advanced rapidly since these publications. A detailed review of relevant current research is thus required, to assess whether the existing guidelines and resulting guides need revision or renewal. This introductory paper provides a brief chronology of events leading to the preparation of this journal supplement, including a statement of purpose and an overview of organization and content. A brief discussion of the purpose of the physical activity guidelines and guides, intended biological, psychological, and behavioural outcomes, and the way in which guidelines relate to on-going measurement and surveillance is provided as a context for the papers that follow.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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