Preventive Medicine Reports (Dec 2017)

Process evaluation of a culturally-tailored physical activity intervention in African-American mother-daughter dyads

  • Sarah Burkart,
  • Christine W. St. Laurent,
  • Sofiya Alhassan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 88 – 92

Abstract

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The purpose of this study was to describe process evaluation data including intervention fidelity, dosage, quality, participant responsiveness, and program reach for the Mothers And dauGhters daNcing togEther Trial (MAGNET) in Springfield, MA, in Spring 2013 and 2014. Seventy-six mother-daughter dyads were randomized to the mother-daughter group (CH-M, n=28), the child-only group (CH, n=25), or the health education group (CON, n=23). CH-M consisted of 60min of moderate-to-vigorous culturally-tailored dance classes for dyads. CH consisted of dance classes for the child. All groups received homework tutoring and weekly health newsletters. Process evaluation data were assessed at each intervention session (three days/week, 6-months) with semi-structured questionnaires by researchers. CH dance classes were slightly longer (58.2±3.5min) than CH-M (54.4±5.5min). In both groups, participants spent the majority of the dance intervention in light intensity physical activity (PA). Participants in the CH-M group enjoyed participating in MAGNET >90% of the time. Mothers (92%) indicated that they wanted to continue dance as a form of PA. Mothers expressed that transportation, time commitment, and assessments were barriers to participation. Participants suggested future interventions should include longer intervention length and more communications between research staff and mothers. The MAGNET intervention matched the originally intended program in most aspects. A lower intervention dose was delivered to the CH-M group potentially due to barriers described by mothers. Because mother-daughter interventions have shown minimal effects on increasing PA, it is imperative that researchers utilize process evaluation data to shape future studies. Keywords: Implementation, African American, Preadolescent, Girls, Process evaluation