Anita G Cramp
University of Western Ontario
23 Papers
92 Citations
Anita G Cramp is an academic researcher from University of Western Ontario. The author has contributed to research in topics: Overweight & Health education. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 23 publications. Previous affiliations of Anita G Cramp include McMaster University.
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Papers
A prospective examination of exercise and barrier self-efficacy to engage in leisure-time physical activity during pregnancy.
TL;DR: Higher levels of self-efficacy to exercise and to overcome exercise barriers are associated with greater LTPA during pregnancy, and research and interventions should explore the dynamic nature of exercise barriers and foster women's confidence to overcome physical activity barriers.
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Understanding Exercise Self-Efficacy and Barriers to Leisure-Time Physical Activity Among Postnatal Women
Anita G Cramp,Steven R. Bray +1 more
TL;DR: The results of the study identify a number of barriers to LTPA at multiple time points closely following childbirth which may hinder initiation, resumption or maintenance of LTPA and suggest that higher levels of exercise and barrier self-efficacy are prospectively associated with higher levels in the early postnatal period.
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Self-efficacy and affect responses to Sprint Interval Training
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of efficacious beliefs on affective states, enjoyment, and satisfaction after performing a maximal intensity exercise task (i.e., Sprint Interval Training) was examined.
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Pre- and Postnatal Women's Leisure Time Physical Activity Patterns: A Multilevel Longitudinal Analysis
Anita G Cramp,Steven R. Bray +1 more
TL;DR: Growth curve estimates for the linear, quadratic, and cubic trends were significant, indicating that LTPA declined during pregnancy but then increased following birth, and the results demonstrated that the individual trajectories of LTPA varied substantially from the average growth curve.
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Postnatal women's feeling state responses to exercise with and without baby.
Anita G Cramp,Steven R. Bray +1 more
TL;DR: Exercising with baby present may be an effective option that allows mothers to balance care duties and a physically active lifestyle, while achieving psychological benefits associated with exercise participation.
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