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Sport Psychology Consulting With Indigenous Athletes: The Case of New Zealand Māori

Ken Hodge, Lee-Ann Sharp, and Justin Ihirangi Heke

Sport psychology consulting with athletes who are from an indigenous ethnic group presents some challenges and opportunities that do not typically need to be considered when consulting with nonindigenous athletes. Māori 1 are the indigenous ethnic group of New Zealand. To work as a sport psychology consultant with Māori athletes and indeed any indigenous athletes (e.g., Tahitian, First Nation Canadian Indian) it is important for the sport psychologist to have an understanding of Te Ao o Nga Tāngata Whenua (indigenous worldview) and tīkanga Tāngata Whenua (indigenous cultural practices; Hanrahan, 2004; Schinke & Hanrahan, 2009; Tuhiwai-Smith, 1999). Both research and practice in the social sciences regarding Māori people seek to use a Kaupapa Māori (Māori research and practice platform) approach. Kaupapa Māori attempts to ensure that cultural sensitivity is infused from the conceptualization of an intervention (e.g., psychological skills training, psychological intervention) through to the design, delivery, evaluation, final analysis, and presentation of the intervention or research project. A Kaupapa Māori approach to sport psychology consulting attempts to ensure that key Māori aspirations are honored and celebrated, as many Māori do not wish to follow a non-Māori ideology that depersonalizes the whānau (family) perspective and seeks individuality in its place (Durie, 1998a; Mead, 2003). Therefore, an effective sport psychology consulting program for an athlete who lives her or his life from a Te Ao Māori (Māori worldview) and tīkanga Māori (Māori cultural practices) perspective needs to be constructed as a Māori-for-Māori intervention based within a Kaupapa Māori framework.

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The Epidemiology of Domain-Specific Physical Activity in New Zealand Adults: A Nationally Representative Cross-Sectional Survey

Ryan Gage, Anja Mizdrak, Justin Richards, Adrian Bauman, Melissa Mcleod, Rhys Jones, Alistair Woodward, and Caroline Shaw

shown in Supplementary Material S4 [available online]). Self-identified ethnicity data were collected as part of the survey and categorized into 5 groups: NZ European/Pākehā, Māori, Pacific peoples, Asian (included those from Central, East, South Southeast, and Western Asia), and “Other” (eg

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Physical Activity, Function, and Mortality in Advanced Age: A Longitudinal Follow-Up (LiLACS NZ)

Casey Mace Firebaugh, Simon Moyes, Santosh Jatrana, Anna Rolleston, and Ngaire Kerse

an initial sample size of 937 and continued for 6 years, with 350 participants in the most recent completed cohort year ( Mace et al., 2016 ; Hayman et al., 2012 ; Dyall et al., 2013 ). In brief, a complete population recruitment of all Māori aged 80–90 years and a single-year birth cohort (1925

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Descriptive Epidemiology of Physical Activity Levels and Patterns in New Zealanders in Advanced Age

Casey Mace, Ngaire Kerse, Ralph Maddison, Timothy Olds, Santosh Jatrana, Carol Wham, Mere Kepa, Anna Rolleston, Ruth Teh, and Joanna Broad

Background:

Little is known about the physical activity levels and behaviors of advanced age New Zealanders.

Methods:

A cross-sectional analysis of data from Life and Living in Advanced Age: A Cohort Study in New Zealand (LiLACS NZ), Te Puāwaitanga O Nga Tapuwae Kia ora Tonu, measures of physical activity (PASE) (n = 664, aged 80–90 [n = 254, Māori, aged 82.5(2), n = 410 non-Māori, aged 85(.5)]) was conducted to determine physical activity level (PAL). A substudy (n = 45) was conducted to attain detailed information about PAL and behaviors via the Multimedia Activity Recall for Children and Adults (MARCA) and accelerometry. The main study was analyzed by sex for Māori and non-Māori.

Results:

Men consistently had higher levels of physical activity than women for all physical activity measures. Sex was significant for different domains of activity.

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Investigating the Association Between Child Television Viewing and Measured Child Adiposity Outcomes in a Large Nationally Representative Sample of New Zealanders: A Cross-Sectional Study

Matthew Hobbs, Stuart J.H. Biddle, Andrew P. Kingsnorth, Lukas Marek, Melanie Tomintz, Jesse Wiki, John McCarthy, Malcolm Campbell, and Simon Kingham

education has been linked with higher obesity risks in children, 17 and in New Zealand, Māori, and Pacific children are reported to be disproportionately affected by obesity. 18 While many of these parental factors may be hypothesized to moderate the association between sedentary behavior and children

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The New Zealand Physical Activity Questionnaires: Validation by Heart-Rate Monitoring in a Multiethnic Population

Karen L. Moy, Robert K. Scragg, Grant McLean, and Harriette Carr

Background:

This study validated the short- and long-form New Zealand Physical Activity Questionnaires (NZPAQ-SF and NZPAQ-LF) against heart-rate monitoring (HRM) with individual calibration.

Methods:

A multiethnic sample (N = 180), age 19 to 86 y, underwent HRM for 3 consecutive days while simultaneously completing physical activity (PA) logs.

Results:

Both NZPAQs showed significant (p < .001) correlations to HRM data for brisk walking (r = .27–.43), vigorous-intensity PA (r = .27–.35), and total PA (r = .25; 95% CI, 0.10-0.40), whereas moderate-intensity PA was substantially overreported (mean = 157-199 min). Although the NZPAQ-LF performed better for brisk walking and vigorous-intensity PA, the NZPAQs were strongly correlated (r = .61 and r = .52, respectively, p < .0001). European/Other participants demonstrated the most accurate PA recall of total PA on both NZPAQs (r = .36−.41, p < .01).

Conclusions:

The NZPAQs are acceptable instruments for measuring adult PA levels and produce similar results. Substituting culturally specific examples of PAs on the NZPAQs and their accompanying show cards could potentially improve PA recall for Maori and Pacific people.

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Physical Activity Prevalence and Correlates Among New Zealand Older Adults

Hayley Guiney, Michael Keall, and Liana Machado

-related behaviors between indigenous (Māori) and nonindigenous (non-Māori) older adults, in light of well-established ethnic health disparities ( Teh et al., 2014 ). Rather than surveying a nationally-representative sample of older adults, the authors purposefully recruited samples of Māori and non-Māori people

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Kinematic Comparison of Aquatic- and Land-Based Stationary Exercises in Overweight and Normal Weight Children

Mostafa Yaghoubi, Philip W. Fink, Wyatt H. Page, Ali Heydari, and Sarah P. Shultz

study other important components of stationary exercises in children, such as neuromuscular, ground reaction force, and cardiorespiratory responses at different intensities in both environments. Acknowledgments The authors acknowledge the Research Centre for Maori Health and Development at Massey

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Social Media as a Nutrition Resource for Athletes: A Cross-Sectional Survey

Bridget Ellen Philippa Bourke, Dane Francis Baker, and Andrea Jane Braakhuis

Recreational Athletes Total, n  = 306 Elite, n  = 87 Recreational, n  = 219 Age a (years) 22.7 (3.7) 24.1 (5.2) 22.2 (2.8)*** Gender  male 126 (41) 39 (45) 87 (40)  female 180 (59) 48 (55) 132 (60) Ethnicity a  Maori 29 (9) 11 (13) 18 (8)  Pacific 19 (6) 5 (6) 14 (6)  Asian 55 (18) 1 (1) 54 (25)***  European

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Preseason Body Composition Adaptations in Elite White and Polynesian Rugby Union Athletes

Adam J. Zemski, Shelley E. Keating, Elizabeth M. Broad, Damian J. Marsh, Karen Hind, and Gary J. Slater

.D. ( 2009 ). Body size, body composition and fat distribution: Comparative analysis of European, Maori, Pacific Island and Asian Indian adults . British Journal of Nutrition, 102 , 632 – 641 . PubMed ID: 19203416 doi:10.1017/S0007114508207221 10.1017/S0007114508207221 Selkirk , G.A. , & McLellan , T