 |

Volume 31, Issue 1: February, 2004
Abstract
*Ready to Be Physically Active? The Effects of a Course
Preparing Low-Income Multiethnic Women to Be More Physically
Active
Rakale Collins, PhD, Rebecca E. Lee, PhD, Cheryl L. Albright,
PhD, MPH, Abby C. King, PhD
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of a preintervention
physical activity preparatory course on physical activity,
and social, cognitive, and transtheoretical constructs. The
sample included 82 low-income, multiethnic women (75% Latina)
who completed an 8-week course designed to prepare them to
become more active prior to randomization into a 10-month
physical activity intervention. Participants completed precourse
and postcourse measures. Paired-comparison t tests showed
increases in knowledge, perceived social support for exercise,
minutes of walking per week, and total cognitive and behavioral
processes following the preparatory course. Perceived barriers
and self-efficacy for exercise did not change from precourse
to postcourse. Preintervention preparatory courses may be
an effective way to increase social and cognitive constructs
associated with physical activity behavior, potentially yielding
a greater effect from subsequent interventions.
.
|
 |