Abstract:
Background: Attempts to demonstrate the efficacy of interventions aimed at increasing physical activity (PA) have
been mixed. Further, studies are seldom designed in a manner that facilitates the understanding of how or why a
treatment is effective or ineffective and PA intervention designs should be guided by a heavier reliance upon
behavioral theory. The use of a mediating variable framework offers a systematic methodological approach to testing
the role of theory, and could also identify the effectiveness of specific intervention components. The primary purpose
of this paper was to test the mediating role that cognitive constructs may have played in regards to the positive effect
that a workplace behavioral intervention had on leisure-time PA for women. A subsidiary purpose was to examine the
cross-sectional relationships of these cognitive constructs with PA behavior.
Methods: The Physical Activity Workplace Study was a randomized controlled trial which compared the effects of
stage-matched and standard print materials upon self-reported leisure-time PA, within a workplace sample at 6 and
12-months. In this secondary analysis we examined the mediation effects of 14 psychosocial constructs across 3 major
social-cognitive theories which were operationalized for the intervention materials and measured at baseline, 6 and
12-months. We examined change in PA and change in the psychological constructs employing a mediation strategy
proposed by Baron and Kenny for: (1) the first 6-months (i.e., initial change), (2) the second 6-months (i.e., delayed
change), and (3) the entire 12-months (overall change) of the study on 323 women (n = 213 control/standard materials
group; n = 110 stage-matched materials group).
Results: Of the 14 constructs and 42 tests (including initial, delayed and overall change) two positive results were
identified (i.e., overall change in pros, initial change in experiential powerful intervention approaches processes), with
very small effect sizes. However, these mediating results were eliminated after adjusting for the multiple statistical tests.
Conclusions: The intervention did not change these mediators in any substantive way, and show a similar pattern to
prior research where interventions generally do not result in a change in mediation of behavior change. It is important
to report mediation results in randomized controlled trials whether the findings are null or positive. Future studies may
wish to focus on more detailed dose-response issues between mediators and behavior, the inclusion of moderators
that could affect individual change, or different mediator constructs at higher levels of measurement specificity.
Continued work on innovative and more powerful PA intervention approaches are needed.