Family-based interventions to increase physical activity in children: a systematic review, meta-analysis and realist synthesis

Summary Objective Family‐based interventions represent a potentially valuable route to increasing child physical activity (PA) in children. A dual meta‐analysis and realist synthesis approach examined existing interventions to assist those developing programmes to encourage uptake and maintenance of...

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Published inObesity reviews Vol. 17; no. 4; pp. 345 - 360
Main Authors Brown, H. E., Atkin, A. J., Panter, J., Wong, G., Chinapaw, M. J. M., van Sluijs, E. M. F.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.04.2016
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Summary Objective Family‐based interventions represent a potentially valuable route to increasing child physical activity (PA) in children. A dual meta‐analysis and realist synthesis approach examined existing interventions to assist those developing programmes to encourage uptake and maintenance of PA in children. Design Studies were screened for inclusion based on including participants aged 5–12 years, having a substantive aim of increasing PA by engaging the family and reporting on PA outcome. Duplicate data extraction and quality assessment were conducted. Meta‐analysis was conducted in STATA. Realist synthesis included theory development and evidence mapping. Results Forty‐seven studies were included, of which three received a ‘strong’ quality rating, 21 ‘moderate’ and 23 ‘weak’. The meta‐analysis (19 studies) demonstrated a significant small effect in favour of the experimental group (standardized mean difference: 0.41; 95%CI 0.15–0.67). Sensitivity analysis, removing one outlier, reduced this to 0.29 (95%CI 0.14–0.45). Realist synthesis (28 studies) provided insight into intervention context (particularly, family constraints, ethnicity and parental motivation), and strategies to change PA (notably, goal‐setting and reinforcement combined). Conclusion This review provides key recommendations to inform policy makers and other practitioners in developing evidence‐based interventions aimed at engaging the family to increase PA in children, and identifies avenues for future research.
Bibliography:Economic and Social Research Council
Table S1: Descriptive characteristics of studies included in systematic review of family-based physical activity interventions.Table S2: Results of duplicate quality assessment of studies, using the Effective Public Health Practice Project (EPHPP) Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative StudiesFile S1: Generic search terms, used in PubMed (title and abstract), Web of Knowledge (topic), Scopus (title, abstract and keywords), Ovid MEDLINE (abstract) and PsycInfo (abstract).
British Heart Foundation
Cancer Research UK
NIHR post-doctoral fellowship - No. NIHR-PDF-2012-05-157
National Institute for Health Research
Medical Research Council
Medical Research Council - No. MC_UU_12015/7
Wellcome Trust - No. RES-590-28-0002
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Systematic review registration: The review protocol was registered with the International Prospective Register for Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) CRD42013005780
ISSN:1467-7881
1467-789X
DOI:10.1111/obr.12362