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Volume 30, Issue 4: August, 2003
Abstract
Maintenance of Effects of the CATCH Physical Education
Program: Results From the CATCH-ON Study
LThomas L. McKenzie, PhD, Donglin Li, MD, MPH, Carol A. Derby,
PhD, Larry S. Webber, PhD, Russell V. Luepker, MD, Peter Cribb,
MEd
Long-term maintenance effects of physical education (PE)
curriculum and staff development programs have not been studied.
The authors assessed the sustainability of the Child and Adolescent
Trial for Cardiovascular Health (CATCH) PE intervention using
direct observations of 1,904 PE lessons in former intervention
and control schools in four U.S. states 5-years postintervention.
Student physical activity levels, lesson contexts, and level
ofCATCHPE training of teachers were analyzed. Student energy
expenditure levels and proportion of PE time in moderate-to-vigorous
physical activity in intervention schools were maintained
5 years later, but vigorous activity declined sharply. Meanwhile,
postintervention gains in former control schools, influenced
by delayed program implementation and secular trends, resulted
in a convergence of activity levels in intervention and control
schools. Use of CATCH PE curricula was associated with increased
levels of teacher training and school support for PE in both
former intervention and control schools.
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