Application of the transtheoretical model to identify predictors of physical activity transition in university students

SooJin Kang, YoungHo Kim

Abstract

Within the physical activity domain the majority of transtheoretical model research has employed a cross sectional research design. While useful for characterizing participants within the various stages of change, it fails to capture the dynamic nature of change. The purpose of the current study was to identify predictors of naturally occurring transitional shift patterns in physical activity behavior observed over six months among 202 university students. The full set of variables from the transtheoretical model as well as exercise METS was examined. Results indicated that stable active participants reported more exercise METs at baseline than both activity adopters and perpetual preparers in multinomial logistic regression analysis (p<.01). Stable active participants were also significantly different in their cognitive process of change scores compared to activity adopters (p<.05). Activity adopters differed from stable active participants in their initial decisional balance scores (p<.05). These findings should help inform theory development and physical activity interventions and programs.

Keywords

Physical activity; Transitional shifts; University students; Transtheoretical model

Full Text:

PDF

Article Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Metrics powered by PLOS ALM
Copyright (c) 2017