Abstract

BackgroundDeclining levels of physical fitness in children are linked to an increased risk of developing poor physical and mental health. Physical activity programs for children that involve regular high intensity physical activity, along with muscle and bone strengthening activities, have been identified by the World Health Organisation as a key strategy to reduce the escalating burden of ill health caused by non-communicable diseases. This paper reports the rationale and methods for a school-based intervention designed to improve physical fitness and physical activity levels of Grades 5 and 6 primary school children.Methods/DesignFit-4-Fun is an 8-week multi-component school-based health-related fitness education intervention and will be evaluated using a group randomized controlled trial. Primary schools from the Hunter Region in NSW, Australia, will be invited to participate in the program in 2011 with a target sample size of 128 primary schools children (age 10-13). The Fit-4-Fun program is theoretically grounded and will be implemented applying the Health Promoting Schools framework. Students will participate in weekly curriculum-based health and physical education lessons, daily break-time physical activities during recess and lunch, and will complete an 8-week (3 × per week) home activity program with their parents and/or family members. A battery of six health-related fitness assessments, four days of pedometery-assessed physical activity and a questionnaire, will be administered at baseline, immediate post-intervention (2-months) and at 6-months (from baseline) to determine intervention effects. Details of the methodological aspects of recruitment, inclusion criteria, randomization, intervention program, assessments, process evaluation and statistical analyses are described.DiscussionThe Fit-4-Fun program is an innovative school-based intervention targeting fitness improvements in primary school children. The program will involve a range of evidence-based behaviour change strategies to promote and support physical activity of adequate intensity, duration and type, needed to improve health-related fitness.Trial Registration NoAustralia and New Zealand Clinical Trials Register (ANZCTR): ACTRN12611000976987

Highlights

  • Declining levels of physical fitness in children are linked to an increased risk of developing poor physical and mental health

  • The program will involve a range of evidence-based behaviour change strategies to promote and support physical activity of adequate intensity, duration and type, needed to improve health-related fitness

  • Recent studies have shown that children who display high levels of physical fitness, especially health-related fitness (HRF) [6], have a

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Summary

Discussion

The Fit-4-Fun study described in this paper is one of the first RCTs in Australia to target the HRF levels of primary school children. The results of this study will provide further evidence to support the feasibility and efficacy of the Fit-4-Fun intervention for improving the HRF and PA levels of children, along with their attitudes towards physical fitness. The findings of this study will provide valuable information for other research groups looking to improve the HRF levels of children via school-based interventions. It will ascertain whether the Fit-4-Fun program is an effective program for future large-scale implementation

Background
Methods/Design
Malina RM
Grissom JB
22. Bandura A
26. Bandura A: Self-efficacy: the exercise of control New York
59. Martin MK
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