School of Human Movement Studies, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
Sports Med. 2013 Mar;43(3):195-206. doi: 10.1007/s40279-012-0015-8.
Evidence suggests chronic physical activity (PA) participation may be both protective against the onset of and beneficial for reducing depressive symptoms.
The aim of this article is to assess the impact of PA interventions on depression in children and adolescents using meta-analysis.
Published English language studies were located from manual and computerized searches of the following databases: PsycInfo, The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and The Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Trials Register of Promoting Health Interventions (TRoPHI; EPPI Centre), Web of Science and MEDLINE.
Studies meeting inclusion criteria (1) reported on interventions to promote or increase PA; (2) included children aged 5-11 years and/or adolescents aged 12-19 years; (3) reported on results using a quantitative measure of depression; (4) included a non-physical control or comparison group; and (5) were published in peer-reviewed journals written in English, up to and including May 2011 (when the search was conducted).
Studies were coded for methodological, participant and study characteristics. Comprehensive Meta-Analysis version-2 software was used to compute effect sizes, with subgroup analyses to identify moderating characteristics. Study quality was assessed using the Delphi technique.
Nine studies were included (n = 581); most were school-based randomized controlled trials, randomized by individual. Studies used a variety of measurement tools to assess depressive symptoms. The summary treatment effect was small but significant (Hedges' g = -0.26, standard error = 0.09, 95% confidence intervals = -0.43, -0.08, p = 0.004). Subgroup analyses showed that methodological (e.g. studies with both education and PA intervention; those with a higher quality score; and less than 3 months in duration) and participant characteristics (e.g. single-gender studies; those targeting overweight or obese groups) contributed most to the reduction in depression.
There was a small significant overall effect for PA on depression. More outcome-focused, high-quality trials are required to effectively inform the implementation of programmes to reduce depressive symptoms in children and adolescents.
有证据表明,慢性身体活动(PA)的参与既可以预防抑郁的发生,也有益于减轻抑郁症状。
本文旨在通过荟萃分析评估 PA 干预对儿童和青少年抑郁的影响。
从手动和计算机搜索以下数据库中找到了已发表的英语研究:PsycInfo、Cochrane 系统评价数据库和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册、促进健康干预措施的试验登记册(TRoPHI;EPPI 中心)、Web of Science 和 MEDLINE。
符合纳入标准的研究(1)报告了促进或增加 PA 的干预措施;(2)包括 5-11 岁的儿童和/或 12-19 岁的青少年;(3)使用抑郁的定量测量结果报告结果;(4)包括非身体对照或对照组;(5)以英文发表在同行评议的期刊上,截至 2011 年 5 月(搜索时)。
研究按方法学、参与者和研究特征进行编码。使用 Comprehensive Meta-Analysis version-2 软件计算效应大小,并进行亚组分析以确定调节特征。使用 Delphi 技术评估研究质量。
纳入了 9 项研究(n=581);大多数是基于学校的随机对照试验,按个体随机分组。研究使用了各种测量工具来评估抑郁症状。总的治疗效果虽小但有统计学意义(Hedges' g=-0.26,标准误差=0.09,95%置信区间=-0.43,-0.08,p=0.004)。亚组分析表明,方法学特征(例如,同时进行教育和 PA 干预的研究;质量评分较高的研究;以及持续时间不到 3 个月的研究)和参与者特征(例如,单性别研究;针对超重或肥胖人群的研究)对降低抑郁的影响最大。
PA 对抑郁有较小但显著的总体效果。需要更多以结果为导向的高质量试验,以便有效地为实施方案提供信息,以减少儿童和青少年的抑郁症状。