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Health Promotion International Advance Access published online on October 29, 2009

Health Promotion International, doi:10.1093/heapro/dap048
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© The Author (2009). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Article

Testing the hierarchy of effects model: ParticipACTION's serial mass communication campaigns on physical activity in Canada

C. L. Craig1,2,*, A. Bauman2,1 and B. Reger-Nash3

1Canadian Fitness and Lifestyle Research Institute, 201-185 Somerset St W, Ottawa,, Ontario, Canada K2P 0J2, 2 School of Public Health, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia and 3 West Virginia University, WV, USA

* Corresponding author. E-mail: ccraig{at}cflri.ca


   Abstract

The hierarchy of effects (HOE) model is often used in planning mass-reach communication campaigns to promote health, but has rarely been empirically tested. This paper examines Canada's 30 year ParticipACTION campaign to promote physical activity (PA). A cohort from the nationally representative 1981 Canada Fitness Survey was followed up in 1988 and 2002–2004. Modelling of these data tested whether the mechanisms of campaign effects followed the theoretical framework proposed in the HOE. Campaign awareness was measured in 1981. Outcome expectancy, attitudes, decision balance and future intention were asked in 1988. PA was assessed at all time points. Logistic regression was used to sequentially test mediating and moderating variables adjusting for age, sex and education. No selection bias was observed; however, relatively fewer respondents than non-respondents smoked or were underweight at baseline. Among those inactive at baseline, campaign awareness predicted outcome expectancy which in turn predicted positive attitude to PA. Positive attitudes predicted high decision balance, which predicted future intention. Future intention mediated the relationship between decision balance and sufficient activity. Among those sufficiently active at baseline, awareness was unrelated to outcome expectancy and inversely related to positive attitude. These results lend support to the HOE model, in that the effects of ParticipACTION's serial mass media campaigns were consistent with the sequential rollout of its messages, which in turn was associated with achieving an active lifestyle among those initially insufficiently active. This provides support to an often-used theoretical framework for designing health promotion media campaigns.

Key words: mass media; community intervention; population based; social marketing


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