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Finding
Finding
null
Healthy lifestyle behaviors at age 17 (balanced meals, adequate sleep, regular exercise) did not significantly predict obesity at age 22, despite being improved by better parent-youth relationship quality.
| Follow-up | 5 years |
| Comparator | Control group receiving typical school-based services |
| Effect summary | null |
| Effect modifiers | [{"modifier": "Gender (effect of relationship quality on healthy behaviors)", "interaction_p": "p < .05", "direction": "amplifies", "stratum_details": "Boys \u03b2 = \u2212.09 (ns), girls \u03b2 = .42 (\u03c7\u00b2(1) = 4.59, p < .05)", "plain_language": "Better parent-youth relationships improved healthy behaviors only in girls, not boys.", "annotation_notes": "Note: the boy path was negative (\u03b2 = \u2212.09), which is an unexpected sign."}] |
Connected entities
Interventions
Conditions
Outcomes
Populations
Source
PMC3634561
Direct and Indirect Effects of a Family-Based Intervention in Early Adolescence on Parent-Youth Relationship Quality, Late Adolescent Health, and Early Adult Obesity