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Factors That Influence Physical Activity Behavior in Children and Adolescents During and After Cancer Treatment: A Qualitative Systematic Review of the Literature

Laura Kappelmann, Miriam Götte, Arno Krombholz, Jan Hüter, and Britta Fischer

( 4 , 9 ), there were no exclusion criteria regarding the study design (eg, quantitative, qualitative) in order not to exclude relevant studies in advance. Searches were conducted in both English and German in August 2021 using the electronic databases PubMed, SPORTDiscus, Cochrane, FIS, and Web of

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Editor’s Notes

Craig A. Williams

examining “Factors that influence physical activity behavior in children and adolescents during and after cancer treatment: a qualitative systematic review of the literature” by Laura Kappelmann et al. Please do check it out.

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Exploration of Barriers and Facilitators to Implementing Best Practice in Exercise Medicine in Primary Pediatric Care—Pediatrician Perspectives

Kim D. Lu, Dan Cooper, Raluca Dubrowski, Melanie Barwick, and Shlomit Radom-Aizik

. All participants indicated in writing their consent to participate in the present research. Data Collection Both quantitative and qualitative data were collected. To explore the barriers and facilitators to practice change, we first invited PCPs to complete a CFIR-informed questionnaire to explore a

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Abstracts From the XXXIII Pediatric Work Physiology Conference Hosted by Swansea University (September 2023, Chepstow, Wales)

Subscales (Peabody) (N=22) and the Athletic Skills Track-1 (AST) (N=32). To evaluate PA, parents completed a co-activity questionnaire (N=31). A process evaluation explored coaches’ and parents’ experiences through a qualitative methodology. RESULTS: Results indicated significant gains in children’s MC in

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A National Implementation Approach for Exercise as Usual Care in Pediatric and Adolescent Oncology: Network ActiveOncoKids

Miriam Götte, Regine Söntgerath, Gabriele Gauß, Joachim Wiskemann, Mirko Buždon, and Sabine Kesting

activity levels, and physical and psychosocial health. Ongoing quantitative and qualitative studies assess motivations and barriers for engagement in outdoor sports, as well as factors influencing physical activity behavior after cancer treatment. A recently launched EU-project, the FORTE study examines a

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Abstracts From the 2024 North American Society for Pediatric Exercise Medicine Conference: Giving Kids a Chance Through Exercise (August 2024, Louisville, Kentucky, USA)

: baseline; T2: one-year follow-up). We conducted follow-up interviews and document reviews to contextualize the findings. Descriptive statistics and content analysis summarized quantitative and qualitative data, respectively. Results: Three communities had at least two count timepoints and were included

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Abstracts From the 2022 North American Society for Pediatric Exercise Medicine Conference: The Child’s Right to be Fit (August 2022, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada)

semi-structured interview. A deductive-inductive thematic analysis using Whitehead’s (2010) conceptualization of PL was applied to the qualitative data. Results: Eighty-six children completed the CAPL-2 (age=10.0±1.3 years, 50% girls). Among them, 80.2% (n=69) were beginning/progressing in their

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Physical Activity Levels During School Recess in a Nationally Representative Sample of 10- to 11-Year-Olds

Lan Sum Wong, John J. Reilly, Paul McCrorie, and Deirdre M. Harrington

. Barriers and facilitators to leisure physical activity in children: a qualitative approach using the socio-ecological model . Int J Environ Res Public Health 2020 ; 17 : 3033 . doi: 10.3390/ijerph17093033 19. McCrorie P , Ellaway A . Objectively measured physical activity levels of Scottish

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Abstracts from the 32nd Pediatric Work Physiology Conference (September 2021, Virtual)

-to-vigorous-intensity PA in children and adolescents; however, few studies have explored their use in a family-setting (n = 3). Methods: This study used a Pillar Integration Process (integration of quantitative and qualitative findings) to explore the acceptability and feasibility of using wearables in a family