Professor Mark Tremblay along with members of the ParticipACTION Research Advisory Group, and led by Graduate Student Heather Gainforth from Queen’s University, published a paper recently in Translational Behavioral Medicine titled “Evaluating the uptake of Canada’s new physical activity and sedentary behaviour guidelines on service organizations’ websites”. Full citation information is available below.

Gainforth HL, Berry T, Faulkner G, Rhodes R, Spence J, Tremblay MS, Latimer-Cheung AE. Evaluating the uptake of Canada’s new physical activity and sedentary behaviour guidelines on service organizations’ websites. Translational Behavioral Medicine 3(2):172-179, 2013.

ABSTRACT: New evidence-based physical activity and sedentary behavior guidelines for Canadians were launched in 2011. As a consequence, service organizations that promote physical activity directly to the public needed to change their promotion materials to reflect the new guidelines. Little is known about the rate at which service organizations adopt and integrate new evidence-based guidelines and determinants of guideline adoption. In this natural observational study, we evaluated the rate of online adoption of the new guidelines among key service organizations that promote physical activity and examined participation in a booster webinar as a supplemental dissemination strategy. One hundred fifty nine service organization websites were coded by one of six raters prior to the release of the new guidelines as well as at 3, 6, and 9 months after the release. Online adoption of the guidelines increased during the coding period with 51 % of organizations posting the guidelines or related information on their websites. Organizations’ engagement in a webinar was associated with their adoption of the guidelines. The release of new Canadian Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines led to increased guideline adoption on service organizations’ websites. However, adoption was not universal. In order for the uptake of the new guidelines to be successful, further efforts need to be taken to ensure that service organizations present physical activity guidelines on their websites. Comprehensive, active dissemination strategies tailored to address organizational barriers are needed to ensure online guideline adoption.