Publications by authors named "Kara Saiki"

Prediabetes disproportionately affects racial and ethnic minority groups in Hawai'i. The National Diabetes Prevention Program lifestyle change program (National DPP LCP) decreases the risk of developing diabetes. However, enrolling and retaining participants is a challenge for program providers.

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This perspectives article shares insights from a county-level project in Franklin County, Ohio, to build collective organizational health literacy (HL) capacity across new sustainable networks to advance community-level HL. We provide an overview of the initiative followed by specific insights from a cultural liaison, the article's first author, who works in a community-based organization. He shares his collectivist perspective in building HL capacity at the grassroots level toward community-level goals.

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Purpose: Understanding theoretically derived social and behavioral mediators of long-term increases in physical activity (PA) in a vulnerable population at risk for being underactive is needed to inform future research, clinical applications, and public health efforts. This is an analysis of potential mediators of an intervention that increased long-term (12-month) moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in postpartum (2-12months) women in a randomized trial, using a longitudinal analysis.

Methods: Healthy, underactive (i.

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Approximately 70% of new mothers do not meet national guidelines for moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). The Nā Mikimiki ("the active ones") Project (2008-2011) was designed to increase MVPA among women with infants 2-12 months old. Participants' barriers to exercising and achievement of specific MVPA goals were discussed during telephone counseling calls over 12 months.

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Objective: Few postpartum ethnic minority women perform leisure-time moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). The study tested the effectiveness of a 12-month tailored intervention to increase MVPA in women with infants 2-12months old.

Methods: From 2008 to 2011, women (n=311) with infants (average age=5.

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Article Synopsis
  • Ethnic minority women experience higher rates of inactivity during the postpartum period compared to white women.
  • The Nā Mikimiki Project aims to boost physical activity in multiethnic women with infants aged 2-12 months through a telephone counseling intervention over 18 months, using a randomized controlled trial design.
  • The study found that while participants had high perceived benefits and self-efficacy for exercise, their social support for working out was low, indicating common barriers to physical activity similar to previous studies involving predominantly white women.
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