Wolfenden Luke, Jones Jannah, Williams Christopher M, Finch Meghan, Wyse Rebecca J, Kingsland Melanie, Tzelepis Flora, Wiggers John, Williams Amanda J, Seward Kirsty, Small Tameka, Welch Vivian, Booth Debbie, Yoong Sze Lin
School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia, 2308.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 Oct 4;10(10):CD011779. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011779.pub2.
Despite the existence of effective interventions and best-practice guideline recommendations for childcare services to implement policies, practices and programmes to promote child healthy eating, physical activity and prevent unhealthy weight gain, many services fail to do so.
The primary aim of the review was to examine the effectiveness of strategies aimed at improving the implementation of policies, practices or programmes by childcare services that promote child healthy eating, physical activity and/or obesity prevention. The secondary aims of the review were to:1. describe the impact of such strategies on childcare service staff knowledge, skills or attitudes;2. describe the cost or cost-effectiveness of such strategies;3. describe any adverse effects of such strategies on childcare services, service staff or children;4. examine the effect of such strategies on child diet, physical activity or weight status.
We searched the following electronic databases on 3 August 2015: the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE, MEDLINE In Process, EMBASE, PsycINFO, ERIC, CINAHL and SCOPUS. We also searched reference lists of included trials, handsearched two international implementation science journals and searched the World Health Organization International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (www.who.int/ictrp/) and ClinicalTrials.gov (www.clinicaltrials.gov).
We included any study (randomised or non-randomised) with a parallel control group that compared any strategy to improve the implementation of a healthy eating, physical activity or obesity prevention policy, practice or programme by staff of centre-based childcare services to no intervention, 'usual' practice or an alternative strategy.
The review authors independently screened abstracts and titles, extracted trial data and assessed risk of bias in pairs; we resolved discrepancies via consensus. Heterogeneity across studies precluded pooling of data and undertaking quantitative assessment via meta-analysis. However, we narratively synthesised the trial findings by describing the effect size of the primary outcome measure for policy or practice implementation (or the median of such measures where a single primary outcome was not stated).
We identified 10 trials as eligible and included them in the review. The trials sought to improve the implementation of policies and practices targeting healthy eating (two trials), physical activity (two trials) or both healthy eating and physical activity (six trials). Collectively the implementation strategies tested in the 10 trials included educational materials, educational meetings, audit and feedback, opinion leaders, small incentives or grants, educational outreach visits or academic detailing. A total of 1053 childcare services participated across all trials. Of the 10 trials, eight examined implementation strategies versus a usual practice control and two compared alternative implementation strategies. There was considerable study heterogeneity. We judged all studies as having high risk of bias for at least one domain.It is uncertain whether the strategies tested improved the implementation of policies, practices or programmes that promote child healthy eating, physical activity and/or obesity prevention. No intervention improved the implementation of all policies and practices targeted by the implementation strategies relative to a comparison group. Of the eight trials that compared an implementation strategy to usual practice or a no intervention control, however, seven reported improvements in the implementation of at least one of the targeted policies or practices relative to control. For these trials the effect on the primary implementation outcome was as follows: among the three trials that reported score-based measures of implementation the scores ranged from 1 to 5.1; across four trials reporting the proportion of staff or services implementing a specific policy or practice this ranged from 0% to 9.5%; and in three trials reporting the time (per day or week) staff or services spent implementing a policy or practice this ranged from 4.3 minutes to 7.7 minutes. The review findings also indicate that is it uncertain whether such interventions improve childcare service staff knowledge or attitudes (two trials), child physical activity (two trials), child weight status (two trials) or child diet (one trial). None of the included trials reported on the cost or cost-effectiveness of the intervention. One trial assessed the adverse effects of a physical activity intervention and found no difference in rates of child injury between groups. For all review outcomes, we rated the quality of the evidence as very low. The primary limitation of the review was the lack of conventional terminology in implementation science, which may have resulted in potentially relevant studies failing to be identified based on the search terms used in this review.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Current research provides weak and inconsistent evidence of the effectiveness of such strategies in improving the implementation of policies and practices, childcare service staff knowledge or attitudes, or child diet, physical activity or weight status. Further research in the field is required.
尽管存在有效的干预措施以及针对儿童保育服务的最佳实践指南建议,以实施促进儿童健康饮食、身体活动和预防不健康体重增加的政策、实践和项目,但许多服务机构未能做到这一点。
本综述的主要目的是研究旨在提高儿童保育服务机构实施促进儿童健康饮食、身体活动和/或预防肥胖的政策、实践或项目的策略的有效性。综述的次要目的是:1. 描述此类策略对儿童保育服务工作人员知识、技能或态度的影响;2. 描述此类策略的成本或成本效益;3. 描述此类策略对儿童保育服务、服务工作人员或儿童的任何不良影响;4. 研究此类策略对儿童饮食、身体活动或体重状况的影响。
我们于2015年8月3日检索了以下电子数据库:Cochrane对照试验中央注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE、MEDLINE在研、EMBASE、PsycINFO、ERIC、CINAHL和SCOPUS。我们还检索了纳入试验的参考文献列表,手工检索了两份国际实施科学期刊,并检索了世界卫生组织国际临床试验注册平台(www.who.int/ictrp/)和ClinicalTrials.gov(www.clinicaltrials.gov)。
我们纳入了任何有平行对照组的研究(随机或非随机),该研究将旨在改善中心型儿童保育服务工作人员实施健康饮食、身体活动或预防肥胖政策、实践或项目的任何策略与无干预、“常规”实践或替代策略进行比较。
综述作者独立筛选摘要和标题,提取试验数据并成对评估偏倚风险;我们通过协商一致解决分歧。研究之间的异质性排除了数据合并和通过荟萃分析进行定量评估的可能性。然而,我们通过描述政策或实践实施的主要结局指标的效应大小(或在未说明单一主要结局时此类指标的中位数)对试验结果进行了叙述性综合。
我们确定了10项试验符合条件并将其纳入综述。这些试验旨在改善针对健康饮食(两项试验)、身体活动(两项试验)或健康饮食和身体活动两者(六项试验)的政策和实践的实施。在这10项试验中测试的实施策略总体上包括教育材料、教育会议、审核与反馈、意见领袖、小额激励或资助、教育外展访问或学术详述。所有试验共有1053家儿童保育服务机构参与。在这10项试验中,8项试验将实施策略与常规实践对照进行比较,2项试验比较了替代实施策略。研究存在相当大的异质性。我们判断所有研究在至少一个领域存在高偏倚风险。尚不确定所测试的策略是否改善了促进儿童健康饮食、身体活动和/或预防肥胖的政策、实践或项目的实施。相对于对照组,没有干预措施能改善实施策略所针对的所有政策和实践的实施情况。然而,在8项将实施策略与常规实践或无干预对照进行比较的试验中,7项试验报告相对于对照,至少一项目标政策或实践的实施有改善。对于这些试验,对主要实施结局的影响如下:在3项报告基于分数的实施测量的试验中,分数范围为1至5.1;在4项报告实施特定政策或实践的工作人员或服务机构比例的试验中,该比例范围为0%至9.5%;在3项报告工作人员或服务机构实施政策或实践所花费的时间(每天或每周)的试验中,该时间范围为4.3分钟至7.7分钟。综述结果还表明,不确定此类干预措施是否能改善儿童保育服务工作人员的知识或态度(两项试验)、儿童身体活动(两项试验)、儿童体重状况(两项试验)或儿童饮食(一项试验)。纳入的试验均未报告干预措施的成本或成本效益。一项试验评估了一项身体活动干预的不良影响,发现两组儿童受伤率无差异。对于所有综述结局,我们将证据质量评为极低。综述的主要局限性在于实施科学中缺乏常规术语,这可能导致基于本综述使用的检索词未能识别潜在相关研究。
目前的研究提供了薄弱且不一致的证据,证明此类策略在改善政策和实践的实施、儿童保育服务工作人员的知识或态度、或儿童饮食、身体活动或体重状况方面的有效性。该领域需要进一步的研究。