Mediators of change in screen-time in a school-based intervention for adolescent boys: findings from the ATLAS cluster randomized controlled trial.

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ID: 16941
2017
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Abstract
The mechanisms of behavior change in youth screen-time interventions are poorly understood. Participants were 361 adolescent boys (12-14 years) participating in the ATLAS obesity prevention trial, evaluated in 14 schools in low-income areas of New South Wales, Australia. Recreational screen-time was assessed at baseline, 8- and 18-months, whereas potential mediators (i.e., motivation to limit screen-time and parental rules) were assessed at baseline, 4- and 18-months. Multi-level mediation analyses followed the intention-to-treat principle and were conducted using a product-of-coefficients test. The intervention had a significant impact on screen-time at both time-points, and on autonomous motivation at 18-months. Changes in autonomous motivation partially mediated the effect on screen-time at 18-months in single and multi-mediator models [AB (95% CI) = -5.49 (-12.13, -.70)]. Enhancing autonomous motivation may be effective for limiting screen-time among adolescent males.Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry No: ACTRN12612000978864.
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Authors Smith, Jordan J;Morgan, Philip J;Lonsdale, Chris;Dally, Kerry;Plotnikoff, Ronald C;Lubans, David R;
Journal journal of behavioral medicine
Year 2017
DOI
10.1007/s10865-016-9810-2
URL
Keywords Keywords not found

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