Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents

A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine the association between demographic and psychosocial factors with physical activity levels of four hundred, 13 year-old adolescents in Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia. Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C) was used to assess physic...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. P., Dan, M. T., Mohd Nasir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nutrition Society of Malaysia 2008
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/6806/
http://www.nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0014_2/supplement.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Putra Malaysia
Language: English
id my.upm.eprints.6806
record_format eprints
spelling my.upm.eprints.68062010-05-21T02:07:07Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/6806/ Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents S. P., Dan M. T., Mohd Nasir A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine the association between demographic and psychosocial factors with physical activity levels of four hundred, 13 year-old adolescents in Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia. Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C) was used to assess physical activity levels among the participants. The respondents comprised 41.8% males and 58.2% females encompassing 56.2% Malays, 42.0% Chinese, and 1.8% Indians. More than one third of the respondents were in the low physical activity level, most (61.5%) were in the moderate category and only 3.0% were in the high physical activity level. Males were more physically active than females (c2=23.667, p=0.0001). Female adolescents (45.1%) were twice as many as male respondents (22.1%) to fall in the low physical activity level category. Physical activity level was not correlated with ethnicity, but there was a significant interaction effect of sex and ethnicity in mean physical activity score (F=8.343, p=0.004) which indicated that Malay males had a higher mean physical activity score compared to Chinese males while Chinese females had a higher mean physical activity score than Malay females. For psycho-social factors, physical activity was positively correlated with physical activity self-efficacy (r=0.496, p=0.0001), peer influence (r=0.468, p=0.0001), family influence (r=0.298, p=0.0001) and beliefs for physical activity outcome (r=0.207, p=0.0001) while negatively associated with depression (r=-0.116, p=0.021) and body size discrepancy (r=-0.143, p<0.01). Further, respondents who had a better perception of their current health status were more physically active (c2=21.062, p=0.0001). However, physical activity was not correlated with perception of weight status and body parts satisfaction. Multivariate analysis showed that physical activity self-efficacy, sex and peer influence were found to be significant in explaining physical activity among adolescents. Findings from this study suggest that physical activity intervention should include physical activity self-efficacy and social influence components in interventions designed to promote regular physical activity in adolescence. Nutrition Society of Malaysia 2008-09 Article PeerReviewed S. P., Dan and M. T., Mohd Nasir (2008) Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents. Malaysian Journal of Nutrition, 14 (2(supplement)). S23-S23. ISSN 1394-035X http://www.nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0014_2/supplement.pdf English
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine the association between demographic and psychosocial factors with physical activity levels of four hundred, 13 year-old adolescents in Kuantan, Pahang, Malaysia. Physical Activity Questionnaire for Older Children (PAQ-C) was used to assess physical activity levels among the participants. The respondents comprised 41.8% males and 58.2% females encompassing 56.2% Malays, 42.0% Chinese, and 1.8% Indians. More than one third of the respondents were in the low physical activity level, most (61.5%) were in the moderate category and only 3.0% were in the high physical activity level. Males were more physically active than females (c2=23.667, p=0.0001). Female adolescents (45.1%) were twice as many as male respondents (22.1%) to fall in the low physical activity level category. Physical activity level was not correlated with ethnicity, but there was a significant interaction effect of sex and ethnicity in mean physical activity score (F=8.343, p=0.004) which indicated that Malay males had a higher mean physical activity score compared to Chinese males while Chinese females had a higher mean physical activity score than Malay females. For psycho-social factors, physical activity was positively correlated with physical activity self-efficacy (r=0.496, p=0.0001), peer influence (r=0.468, p=0.0001), family influence (r=0.298, p=0.0001) and beliefs for physical activity outcome (r=0.207, p=0.0001) while negatively associated with depression (r=-0.116, p=0.021) and body size discrepancy (r=-0.143, p<0.01). Further, respondents who had a better perception of their current health status were more physically active (c2=21.062, p=0.0001). However, physical activity was not correlated with perception of weight status and body parts satisfaction. Multivariate analysis showed that physical activity self-efficacy, sex and peer influence were found to be significant in explaining physical activity among adolescents. Findings from this study suggest that physical activity intervention should include physical activity self-efficacy and social influence components in interventions designed to promote regular physical activity in adolescence.
format Article
author S. P., Dan
M. T., Mohd Nasir
spellingShingle S. P., Dan
M. T., Mohd Nasir
Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
author_facet S. P., Dan
M. T., Mohd Nasir
author_sort S. P., Dan
title Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
title_short Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
title_full Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
title_fullStr Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
title_full_unstemmed Psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
title_sort psycho-social correlates of physical activity in young adolescents
publisher Nutrition Society of Malaysia
publishDate 2008
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/6806/
http://www.nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0014_2/supplement.pdf
_version_ 1643823564438110208