Frankfurter C, Cunningham C, Morrison KM, Rimas H, Bailey K. Understanding academic clinicians’ intent to treat pediatric obesity. World J Clin Pediatr 2017; 6(1): 60-68 [PMID: 28224097 DOI: 10.5409/wjcp.v6.i1.60]
Corresponding Author of This Article
Karen Bailey, MD, Associate Professor of Pediatric Surgery, Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, McMaster University, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario L8N 3Z5, Canada. kbailey@mcmaster.ca
Research Domain of This Article
Pediatrics
Article-Type of This Article
Prospective Study
Open-Access Policy of This Article
This article is an open-access article which was selected by an in-house editor and fully peer-reviewed by external reviewers. It is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
Table 5 Step two of the hierarchical linear regression analysis for demographic factors and theory of planned behavior subscales on intent to treat (n = 198)
Independent variable
B
SE
β
P value
Sex
1.3
0.69
0.09
0.061
Birth country
-1.23
0.69
-0.09
0.077
Years of experience treating pediatric obesity
-0.04
0.21
-0.01
0.86
Attitudes
0.02
0.09
0.01
0.83
Subjective norms
0.38
0.11
0.17
0.001
Perceived behavioral control
0.65
0.05
0.69
< 0.001
Barriers
-0.15
0.09
-0.08
0.097
Citation: Frankfurter C, Cunningham C, Morrison KM, Rimas H, Bailey K. Understanding academic clinicians’ intent to treat pediatric obesity. World J Clin Pediatr 2017; 6(1): 60-68