Effects of a strategy for the promotion of physical activity in students from Bogotá

Authors

  • Leidys Gutiérrez-Martínez Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología
  • Rocío Gámez Martínez Instituto Distrital de Recreación y Deporte
  • Silvia A González Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología
  • Manuel A Bolívar V Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Ingeniería. Centro para la Optimización y la Probabilidad Aplicada
  • Omaira Valencia Estupiñan Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología
  • Olga L Sarmiento Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11606/S1518-8787.2018052017173

Keywords:

School Health. Exercise. Mobile Applications, utilization. Body Mass Index. Sedentary Lifestyle. Health Behavior. Health Promotion.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the effect of the promotion of physical activity during recess on the levels of physical activity, sedentary behaviors, and adiposity of Colombian students. METHODS: Three schools were randomly selected by an intervention group in Bogotá, Colombia, in 2013: Intervention (Active Module of Active Recess – MARA) + Text Messages (SMS) (MARA+SMS group), intervention (MARA group), control (control group). Intervention was implemented for ten weeks. The duration and intensity of physical activity and sedentary behaviors were measured objectively using accelerometers Actigraph-GT3X+. Adiposity was measured by body mass index and fat percentage. We measured at baseline (T0) and during the tenth week of intervention (T1). We evaluated the effect of the intervention using a difference-in-difference analysis (DID). RESULTS: We included 120 students (57.5% girls; mean age = 10.5 years; standard deviation [SD] = 0.64). There was a significant increase in the mean daily minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity in the MARA group (Difference T1-T0 = 6.1 minutes, standard error [SE] = 3.49, p = 0.005) in relation to the control group. There were no significant changes in the minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity in the MARA+SMS group (Difference T1-T0 = -1.0 minute; SE = 3.06; p = 0.363). The minutes decreased in the control group (Difference T1-T0 = -7.7 minutes; SE = 3.15; p = 0.011). The minutes of sedentary behaviors decreased in the MARA and MARA+SMS groups and increased in the control group (MARA Difference T1-T0 = -15.8 minutes; SE = 10.05; p= 0.279; MARA+SMS Difference T1-T0 = -11.5 minutes; SE = 8.80; p= 0.869; Control Difference T1-T0 = 10.9 minutes; SE = 9.07; p = 0.407). There was a higher participation in the MARA group in relation to the MARA+SMS group (MARA group = 34.4%; MARA+SMS group = 12.1%). There were no significant changes in adiposity at 10 weeks according to difference-in-differences analysis (body mass index p: ΔMARA+SMS group versus Δcontrol group = 0.945, ΔMARA group versus Δcontrol group = 0.847, ΔMARA+SMS group versus ΔMARA group = 0.990; FP p ΔMARA+SMS group versus Δcontrol group = 0.788, ΔMARA group versus Δcontrol group = 0.915, ΔMARA+SMS group versus ΔMARA group = 0.975). CONCLUSIONS: The Active Module of Active Recess is a promising strategy to increase physical activity levels and decrease sedentary behavior in students. The addition of Text Messages was not associated with increased moderate to vigorous physical activity or changes in adiposity

Author Biographies

  • Leidys Gutiérrez-Martínez, Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología

    Fundación Valle del Lili. Centro de Investigaciones Clínicas

  • Silvia A González, Universidad de los Andes. Facultad de Medicina. Grupo de Epidemiología

    Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute. Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group.
    Ontario, Canada

Published

2018-08-06

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Gutiérrez-Martínez, L., Martínez, R. G., González, S. A., Bolívar, M. A., Estupiñan, O. V., & Sarmiento, O. L. (2018). Effects of a strategy for the promotion of physical activity in students from Bogotá. Revista De Saúde Pública, 52, 79. https://doi.org/10.11606/S1518-8787.2018052017173