AI 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.

Article Abstract

During the postpartum period, ethnic minority women have higher rates of inactivity/under-activity than white women. The Nā Mikimiki ("the active ones") Project is designed to increase moderate-to-vigorous physical activity over 18 months among multiethnic women with infants 2-12 months old. The study was designed to test, via a randomized controlled trial, the effectiveness of a tailored telephone counseling of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity intervention compared to a print/website materials-only condition. Healthy, underactive women (mean age = 32 ± 5.6 years) with a baby (mean age = 5.7 ± 2.8 months) were enrolled from 2008-2009 (N = 278). Of the total sample, 84% were ethnic minority women, predominantly Asian-American and Native Hawaiian. Mean self-reported baseline level of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was 40 minutes/week with no significant differences by study condition, ethnicity, infant's age, maternal body mass index, or maternal employment. Women had high scores on perceived benefits, self-efficacy, and environmental support for exercise but low scores on social support for exercise. This multiethnic sample's demographic and psychosocial characteristics and their perceived barriers to exercise were comparable to previous physical activity studies conducted largely with white postpartum women. The Nā Mikimiki Project's innovative tailored technology-based intervention and unique population are significant contributions to the literature on moderate-to-vigorous physical activity in postpartum women.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3379789PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03630242.2012.662935DOI Listing

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