4.3 Article

Dyadic reciprocal associations between self-efficacy and planning predict sedentary behaviour

期刊

BRITISH JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY
卷 28, 期 2, 页码 451-466

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bjhp.12633

关键词

dyads; health behaviour change; planning; sedentary behaviour; self-efficacy

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This study investigates the order of associations between self-efficacy and planning in predicting sedentary behavior change among adult dyads. The findings suggest that self-efficacy prompts planning, and there are reciprocal associations between self-efficacy and planning in reducing sedentary behavior time.
Objectives There are two alternative hypotheses regarding bidirectional associations between self-efficacy and planning in predicting health behaviour change: self-efficacy may establish planning (cultivation hypothesis) or planning may enable the formation of self-efficacy (enabling hypothesis). This study investigates the order in which these two social cognitions are linked in adult-adult dyads in the context of sedentary behaviours (SB). Design A longitudinal study with 4 measurement points, spanning 8 months. Methods A total of 320 dyads (age: 18-90 years) were enrolled. Dyads included a focus person (who received the recommendation to reduce SB and intended to change their SB), and their partners, who were willing to support the focus persons and intended to reduce their own SB as well. Data were collected at Time 1 (T1), Time 2 (1 week later, T2), Time 3 (T3, 2 months after T1) and Time 4 (T4, 8 months after T1). SB was measured with accelerometers at (T1 and T4). Mediation models with individual and dyadic reciprocal effects were tested with path analyses. Results Only one indirect effect was found: A higher level of partners' SB reduction-specific self-efficacy at T2 was related to the focus person's more frequent planning to reduce SB at T3, which, in turn, predicted lower SB time among partners at T4. Conclusions The findings provide partial support for the cultivation model (self-efficacy prompting planning) and for dyadic reciprocal associations in the context of SB time reduction among adult dyads.

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