EPISODE · May 10, 2021 · 44 MIN
Episode 12 (Dr Sarah Reedman)
from The ResearchWorks Podcast · host Dr Sarah Reedman
Participation predictors for leisure-time physical activity intervention in children with cerebral palsySarah E Reedman, Roslyn N Boyd, Jenny Ziviani, Catherine Elliott, Robert S Ware, Leanne Sakzewski AbstractAim: To determine the predictors of magnitude of change in response to a participation-focused leisure-time physical activity intervention in children with cerebral palsy (CP) using the ParticiPAte CP protocol.Method: We included 33 children (16 males, 17 females) aged 8 to 12 years (mean age=10y, SD=1y 6mo) with CP with pre/postintervention data from a wait-list randomized trial. The hypothesized linear predictors of change in primary outcomes (Canadian Occupational Performance Measure [COPM]-performance and COPM-satisfaction, Belief in Goal Self-Competence Scale (BiGSS), and minutes per day moderate-to-vigorous physical activity [MVPA]) were: age; Gross Motor Function Classification System level; comorbid autism spectrum disorder (ASD); Goal Attainment Scaling T score; Problems in Schools Questionnaire; Physical Activity Climate Questionnaire; Motives for Physical Activities Measure-Revised; and stage of behaviour change. Multivariable models were selected using the Bayesian information criterion.Results: Overcoming barriers to participation, age, and comorbid ASD explained 49% of the variance in change in COPM-performance. Being motivated by interest and/or enjoyment and age explained 32% of the variance in change in COPM-satisfaction. Being motivated by physical activity competence or appearance (extrinsic motivation) explained 24% of the variance in change in BiGSS. Parental autonomy supportiveness, overcoming barriers to participation, appearance motivation, and baseline MVPA explained 59% of the variance in change in MVPA.Interpretation: These findings support a behaviour paradigm for conceptualizing physical activity in children with CP.What this paper adds: Children who met their treatment goals showed a greater increase in physical activity participation. Children who were more intrinsically motivated by physical activity at baseline improved more. Being older and having a comorbid diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder were associated with an attenuated effect of the therapy.
What this episode covers
Participation predictors for leisure-time physical activity intervention in children with cerebral palsySarah E Reedman, Roslyn N Boyd, Jenny Ziviani, Catherine Elliott, Robert S Ware, Leanne Sakzewski Abstract Aim: To determine the predictors of magnitude of change in response to a participation-focused leisure-time physical activity intervention in children with cerebral palsy (CP) using the ParticiPAte CP protocol. Method: We included 33 children (16 males, 17 females) aged 8 to 12...
NOW PLAYING
Episode 12 (Dr Sarah Reedman)
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m