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Predictors of physical activity,healthy eating and being smoke-free in teens: A theory of planned behaviour approach
Authors:Donna A Murnaghan  Chris M Blanchard  Wendy M Rodgers  Jennifer N LaRosa  Colleen R MacQuarrie  Debbie L MacLellan
Institution:1. PEI Health Research Institute and School of Nursing , University Prince Edward Island , 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 4P3, Canada dmurnaghan@upei.ca;3. Faculty of Medicine , Dalhousie University , 5790 University Avenue, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 1V7, Canada;4. Faculty of Recreation and Physical Education , University of Alberta , P3-20G Van Vliet Centre, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2H9, Canada;5. Comprehensive School Health Research Team , University Prince Edward Island , 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 4P3, Canada;6. Department of Psychology , University Prince Edward Island , 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 4P3, Canada;7. Family and Nutritional Sciences , University Prince Edward Island , 550 University Avenue, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, C1A 4P3, Canada
Abstract:This paper elicited context specific underlying beliefs for physical activity, fruit and vegetable consumption and smoke-free behaviour from the Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB), and then determined whether the TPB explained significant variation in intentions and behaviour over a 1 month period in a sample of grade 7–9 (age 12–16 years) adolescents. Eighteen individual interviews and one focus group were used to elicit student beliefs. Analyses of this data produced behavioural, normative and control beliefs which were put into a TPB questionnaire completed by 183 students at time 1 and time 2. The Path analyses from the main study showed that the attitude/intention relationship was moderately large for fruit and vegetable consumption and small to moderate for being smoke free. Perceived behavioural control had a large effect on being smoke free and a moderately large effect for fruit and vegetable consumption and physical activity. Intention had a large direct effect on all three behaviours. Common (e.g. feel better, more energy) and behaviour-specific (e.g., prevent yellow fingers, control my weight) beliefs emerged across the three health behaviours. These novel findings, to the adolescent population, support the importance of specific attention being given to each of the behaviours in future multi-behavioural interventions.
Keywords:adolescent  theory planned behaviour  schools  physical activity  healthy eating  smoke-free
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