Abstract

Background: School physical activity (PA) policy, physical education curriculum, teacher training, knowledge of physical fitness, and parental support are among the key issues underlying the declining trend of physical fitness in children and adolescents. The Chinese CHAMPS was a multi-faceted intervention program to maximize the opportunities for moderate and vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and increase physical fitness in middle school students. The purpose of the study was to test whether the levels of modification in school physical education policy and curriculum incrementally influenced the changes in cardiorespiratory fitness and other physical fitness outcomes. Methods: This 8-month study was a clustered randomized controlled trial using a 2 × 2 factorial design. The participants were 680 7th grade students (mean age = 12.66 years) enrolled in 12 middle schools that were randomly assigned to one of four treatment conditions: school physical education intervention (SPE), afterschool program intervention (ASP), SPE+ASP, and control. Targeted behaviors of the Chinese CHAMPS were the student’s sedentary behavior and MVPA. The study outcomes were assessed by a test battery of physical fitness at the baseline and posttest. Sedentary behavior and MVPA were measured in randomly selected students using observations and accelerometry. Results: The terms contrasting the pooled effect of SPE, ASP, and SPE+ASP vs. Control, the pooled effect of SPE and SPE+ASP vs. ASP only, and the effect of SPE+ASP vs. ASP on CRF and other physical fitness outcomes were all significant after adjusting for covariates, supporting the study hypothesis. Process evaluation demonstrated high fidelity of the intervention in the targeted students’ behaviors. Conclusions: Chinese CHAMPS demonstrated the impact of varying the amount of MVPA and vigorous physical activity (VPA) on the physical fitness in middle school students in support of the need to increase the opportunity for PA in schools and to introduce high-intensity exercises in school-based PA programs. Modification of school policy, quality of physical education curriculum, and teacher training were important moderators of the improvement in physical fitness. (Trial registration: ChiCTR-IOR-14005388, the Childhood Health; Activity and Motor Performance Study).

Highlights

  • Over the past two decades, there has been a growing consensus that physical fitness is an important marker of cardiometabolic and skeletal health, cognitive development, and quality of life in children and adequate levels of physical activity (PA) being essential to develop and maintain a healthy level of physical fitness [1,2,3]

  • Chinese CHAMPS is effective in enhancing the levels of physical fitness with similar impacts on the primary and secondary outcome measures in Chinese middle school students

  • The incremental effect of Chinese CHAMPS on physical fitness is consistent with systematic reviews of school-based Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) that favored multi-component interventions in various regions across the globe [66,67,68,69,70], amidst the methodological weaknesses and small effect size [27,33,71]

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past two decades, there has been a growing consensus that physical fitness is an important marker of cardiometabolic and skeletal health, cognitive development, and quality of life in children and adequate levels of physical activity (PA) being essential to develop and maintain a healthy level of physical fitness [1,2,3]. Contemporary literature on the relationship between health and physical fitness has used CRF as a proxy of physical fitness in youth studies. CRF is consistently linked with improvement in cardiometabolic health, mental health and cognitive functions in children and adolescents, while the evidence on the relations with other attributes of physical fitness are still accumulating [1,8]. There is a need to demonstrate PA intervention can impact CRF as well as other attributes of physical fitness in children. The Chinese CHAMPS was a multi-faceted intervention program to maximize the opportunities for moderate and vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and increase physical fitness in middle school students. The purpose of the study was to test whether the levels of modification in school physical education policy and curriculum incrementally influenced the changes in cardiorespiratory fitness and other physical fitness outcomes. Results: The terms contrasting the pooled effect of SPE, ASP, and

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