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Journal Article

Citation

Erwin HE, Ickes M, Ahn S, Fedewa A. Am. J. Health Promot. 2014; 28(3): 159-167.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, SAGE Publications)

DOI

10.4278/ajhp.120926-LIT-470

PMID

23875990

Abstract

Objective The purpose of this paper was to explore the effect of recess interventions on children's physical activity (PA) levels and to examine which specific interventions/characteristics have more influence on children's PA. Data Source Academic Search Premier, CINAHL, ERIC, MEDLINE, ProQuest, SPORT Discus. Study Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria Papers published between 1986 and 2012, published in the English language, and evaluating any recess intervention with PA as an outcome. Data Extraction tudy outcomes were distilled into seven domains related to PA: age, gender, intervention type, intervention duration, duration of PA per intervention session, outcome measures, and study region. Data Synthesis Effect sizes were pooled within and across studies for each domain separately. Moderator analyses were performed using gender, age, and total length of intervention. Twenty-three independent samples were provided from 13 studies. Results The estimated overall effect size for time in PA was .56 (SE .07), suggesting a positive and significant mean difference between pretest and posttest PA time after implementing a recess intervention. Differences in PA levels were moderated by age, duration and type of intervention, and type of outcome measures. Conclusion The limited evidence suggests recess interventions can improve youth PA levels. Implications reinforce the importance of schools in advocating for recess during the school day. Strategies shown to increase student PA during recess should be implemented.


Language: en

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