Intervening to reduce workplace sitting: mediating role of social-cognitive constructs during a cluster randomised controlled trial

Mar 8, 2017The international journal of behavioral nutrition and physical activity

How social thinking influences efforts to reduce sitting at work during a group trial

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Abstract

The intervention reduced workplace sitting time by an average of 8.6 minutes per 8-hour day at 3 months.

  • Perceived behavioural control and barrier self-efficacy showed significant positive changes at 3 months.
  • Perceived organisational norms had a significant effect at 3 months but not at 12 months.
  • Perceived behavioural control mediated the reduction in sitting time at 3 months, accounting for 7.5% of the total effect.
  • At 12 months, barrier self-efficacy mediated the reduction in sitting time, accounting for 13.9% of the total effect.
  • Knowledge did not show significant effects on workplace sitting at either time point.

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