Adolescent physical activity participation has clear short- and long-term health benefits, yet nearly half of American youth are not physically active on a regular basis. To design successful interventions and policies for enhancing child, adolescent, and young adult physical activity, it is important to identify the determinants of different physical activity patterns across these developmental periods. This proposal is a continuation of a current research project that has already yielded promising results related to change in youth physical activity over time. Within a developmental social contextual model, the influences of demographic, person, family, peer, school, and neighborhood factors are assessed over time, as are relationships between physical activity patterns, substance use, diet, and depression. The design of the study is multilevel. Target children (N = 360) from three cohorts (10, 12, and 14 years of age) and a parent were recruited from 58 different neighborhoods. Peers of target children also are assessed. Multilevel longitudinal investigations of youth physical activity are virtually nonexistent. With its focus on individual family, school and neighborhood influences on activity over time, the proposed study is designed to provide a comprehensive, real-world view of physical activity patterns in the critical period from childhood to young adulthood. The continuation study proposes an additional 4 years of data collection, extending the current cohort-sequential design to ages 10-21. The proposed study will continue to use new statistical methods suited to the study of longitudinal and multilevel data, allowing us to examine research questions at the individual, family, school, and neighborhood levels. With 4 more years of data collection and the use of sophisticated analytic methods, this study can make a significant contribution in an understudied area, leading to better understanding of the development, correlates, mediators, constraints, and environmental context of physical activity from ages 10-21.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HD035873-10
Application #
7336794
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-RPHB-2 (01))
Program Officer
Esposito, Layla E
Project Start
1998-12-01
Project End
2009-11-30
Budget Start
2007-12-01
Budget End
2009-11-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2008
Total Cost
$410,100
Indirect Cost
Name
Oregon Research Institute
Department
Type
DUNS #
053615423
City
Eugene
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97403
Duncan, Susan C; Seeley, John R; Gau, Jeff M et al. (2012) A Latent Growth Model of Adolescent Physical Activity as a Function of Depressive Symptoms. Ment Health Phys Act 5:57-65
Chaumeton, Nigel; Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E et al. (2011) A measurement model of youth physical activity using pedometer and self, parent, and peer reports. Int J Behav Med 18:209-15
Strycker, Lisa A; Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E et al. (2008) Use of a Local Worker Survey as a Source of Neighborhood Information. Environ Behav 40:726-741
Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E; Strycker, Lisa A et al. (2007) A cohort-sequential latent growth model of physical activity from ages 12 to 17 years. Ann Behav Med 33:80-9
Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E; Strycker, Lisa A (2005) Sources and types of social support in youth physical activity. Health Psychol 24:3-10
Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E; Strycker, Lisa A et al. (2004) A multilevel approach to youth physical activity research. Exerc Sport Sci Rev 32:95-9
Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E; Strycker, Lisa A et al. (2002) Neighborhood physical activity opportunity: a multilevel contextual model. Res Q Exerc Sport 73:457-63
Duncan, Susan C; Duncan, Terry E; Strycker, Lisa A et al. (2002) Relations between youth antisocial and prosocial activities. J Behav Med 25:425-38