Physical activity and healthy eating behavior changes among rural women: an exploratory mediation analysis of a randomized multilevel intervention trial

Author:

Lo Brian K1,Graham Meredith L2,Folta Sara C3,Strogatz David4,Parry Stephen A5,Seguin-Fowler Rebecca A2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Work, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA

2. Texas A&M AgriLife Research, Texas A&M University System, College Station, TX

3. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, Boston, MA

4. Center for Rural Community Health, Bassett Healthcare Network, Cooperstown, NY

5. Cornell Statistical Consulting Unit, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY

Abstract

Abstract Rural women experience disproportionately higher levels of obesity in comparison to their non-rural counterparts. The present exploratory mediation analysis sought to identify mechanisms that might have contributed to rural women’s physical activity and diet changes after participating in a 6-month multilevel community-randomized trial: Strong Hearts, Healthy Communities (SHHC). SHHC was conducted in 16 rural towns in Montana and New York, between 2015 and 2016; 194 overweight, sedentary midlife, and older women (mean age 59; 26.8% overweight; 73.2% obese) participated. Participants in eight towns received the SHHC intervention (n = 101), which focused on healthy behavior change at the individual level as well as creating supportive social and built environments for physical activity and healthy eating. Participants in the other eight towns received an education-only control intervention (n = 93). We investigated the direct and indirect effects of the SHHC intervention through changes to self-efficacy, social support, and built environment perception, on changes in participants’ physical activity and diet. Compared to the controls, SHHC intervention participants increased their social support from friends for physical activity (p = 0.009) and healthy eating (p = 0.032). Participants’ improved social support from friends marginally mediated the intervention effects for walking metabolic equivalent minutes per week, explaining 40.5% of the total effect (indirect effect = +45.24, 95% CI: –1.51, +91.99; p = 0.059). Increasing social support from friends appears to be helpful in encouraging rural women to become more active. Further investigations are needed to better understand how multilevel interventions work in rural communities.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology

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