Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health

As a means to operationalize the National Health Promotion Policy, the Brazilian Ministry of Health funded cities for the development of local health promotion interventions from 2005 to 2009. Out of 1,374 interventions funded in this period, approximately 3/4 developed physical activity promotion s...

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Main Authors: Tales Amorim, Alan Knuth, Danielle Cruz, Deborah Malta, Rodrigo Reis, Pedro Hallal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sociedade Brasileira de Atividade Física e Saúde 2013-05-01
Series:Revista Brasileira de Atividade Física e Saúde
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Online Access:https://rbafs.org.br/RBAFS/article/view/2397
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author Tales Amorim
Alan Knuth
Danielle Cruz
Deborah Malta
Rodrigo Reis
Pedro Hallal
author_facet Tales Amorim
Alan Knuth
Danielle Cruz
Deborah Malta
Rodrigo Reis
Pedro Hallal
author_sort Tales Amorim
collection DOAJ
description As a means to operationalize the National Health Promotion Policy, the Brazilian Ministry of Health funded cities for the development of local health promotion interventions from 2005 to 2009. Out of 1,374 interventions funded in this period, approximately 3/4 developed physical activity promotion strategies. The aim of this article is to describe these interventions. We interviewed those who are responsible for these interventions in 748 cities in Brazil. The Midwest region was the one with the highest proportion of cities being funded (17.8%); 72.3% of the interventions take place in small cities, i.e. those with fewer than 30,000 inhabitants. Communication, education and information strategies were the mostly frequently reported, followed by behavioral and social strategies. Only 8.2% of the interventions achieve more than 500 people. Most interventions (76.9%) focused on older adults, and 59.2% of them were designed for hypertensive and diabetic patients. Oriented walking was the most prevalent offered activity (80.6%), followed by gym classes (78.5%). Most interventions used parks or squares (55.6%) or sports courts (52%). Radio was the most frequent media strategy used (59.8%) to divulgate the interventions. Lack of adequate physical structure and personnel were the main barriers faced by the interventions (30.3%), followed by bureaucracy at obtaining and using the funding (25.1%). Physical education teachers were present in 72.3% of the interventions. The low proportion of funded cities in the North region, the lack of interventions using environmental and policy strategies, inadequate infrastructure and insufficient personnel are key areas in which interventions can improve in order to be more successful.
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spelling doaj-art-1fc32c942e1242b59fda63f41c928f4d2025-01-03T01:01:13ZengSociedade Brasileira de Atividade Física e SaúdeRevista Brasileira de Atividade Física e Saúde1413-34822317-16342013-05-0118110.12820/rbafs.v.18n1p63-74Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of HealthTales AmorimAlan KnuthDanielle CruzDeborah MaltaRodrigo ReisPedro HallalAs a means to operationalize the National Health Promotion Policy, the Brazilian Ministry of Health funded cities for the development of local health promotion interventions from 2005 to 2009. Out of 1,374 interventions funded in this period, approximately 3/4 developed physical activity promotion strategies. The aim of this article is to describe these interventions. We interviewed those who are responsible for these interventions in 748 cities in Brazil. The Midwest region was the one with the highest proportion of cities being funded (17.8%); 72.3% of the interventions take place in small cities, i.e. those with fewer than 30,000 inhabitants. Communication, education and information strategies were the mostly frequently reported, followed by behavioral and social strategies. Only 8.2% of the interventions achieve more than 500 people. Most interventions (76.9%) focused on older adults, and 59.2% of them were designed for hypertensive and diabetic patients. Oriented walking was the most prevalent offered activity (80.6%), followed by gym classes (78.5%). Most interventions used parks or squares (55.6%) or sports courts (52%). Radio was the most frequent media strategy used (59.8%) to divulgate the interventions. Lack of adequate physical structure and personnel were the main barriers faced by the interventions (30.3%), followed by bureaucracy at obtaining and using the funding (25.1%). Physical education teachers were present in 72.3% of the interventions. The low proportion of funded cities in the North region, the lack of interventions using environmental and policy strategies, inadequate infrastructure and insufficient personnel are key areas in which interventions can improve in order to be more successful.https://rbafs.org.br/RBAFS/article/view/2397Government FinancingHealth PromotionPhysical Activity
spellingShingle Tales Amorim
Alan Knuth
Danielle Cruz
Deborah Malta
Rodrigo Reis
Pedro Hallal
Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
Revista Brasileira de Atividade Física e Saúde
Government Financing
Health Promotion
Physical Activity
title Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
title_full Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
title_fullStr Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
title_full_unstemmed Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
title_short Description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Health
title_sort description of the physical activity promotion programs funded by the brazilian ministry of health
topic Government Financing
Health Promotion
Physical Activity
url https://rbafs.org.br/RBAFS/article/view/2397
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