Testing the feasibility and acceptability of a culturally adapted physical activity intervention for adult Somali women

Author:

Murray Kate E1ORCID,Hellier Villafana Veronica Anne1,Sheik Mohamed Amina2,Linke Sarah3,Bowen Deborah J4ORCID,Marcus Bess5

Affiliation:

1. School of Counselling and Psychology, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

2. Center for Community Health, UC San Diego, San Diego, California, USA

3. Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health & Human Longevity Science, UC San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA

4. Department of Bioethics and Humanities, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA

5. Center for Health Promotion and Health Equity, School of Public Health, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, USA

Abstract

Abstract Despite growing numbers in the USA, immigrant populations are underrepresented in existing physical activity (PA) research, in particular Muslim immigrant women. The current study is a pilot evaluation of a culturally adapted evidence-based PA intervention for adult Somali women. Stratified randomization was used to assign participants from a sample of 27 Somali women, aged 18 to 65, to a PA group or a waitlist control group. Bicultural Somali community research team members delivered a 12-week culturally adapted intervention available in English and Somali in a community-based setting. Process and outcome evaluation assessed changes in PA, self-efficacy for PA, access to PA resources, and wellbeing as well as feasibility and satisfaction with the program. Participants in the PA group increased their moderate to vigorous PA significantly more than those from the waitlist group from baseline to post-intervention (2 (SD = 15) to 100 (SD = 53) vs 12 (SD = 21) to 32 (SD = 44) minutes per week). Participants in the PA group had significantly greater scores in wellbeing at post-intervention compared to the waitlist group though there was no significant change from pre- to post-intervention for either group. Participants reported a high level of satisfaction with the program and preliminary evidence supports the general feasibility and acceptability of the program. Findings show that a culturally adapted intervention increased engagement in PA and was feasible and acceptable within a pilot sample of Somali women.

Funder

American Cancer Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology

Reference32 articles.

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4. Islam’s view on physical activity and sport: Egyptian women interpreting Islam;Walseth;Int Rev Sport Soc,2003

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