Friedrich Bettina, Mason Oliver John
Research Department for Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, UK.
School of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
J Public Ment Health. 2017;16(4):144-158. doi: 10.1108/JPMH-03-2017-0011. Epub 2017 Dec 18.
Football exercise as an intervention for people with severe mental health problems has seen an increasing interest in the past years. To date, there is, however, no comprehensive review of the empirical evidence regarding the effectiveness of these interventions. In this review, the authors have comprised the research findings from the peer-review literature as well as the theoretical approaches to football exercise as an adjunct treatment. This overview will be informative to everybody who is planning to develop a football intervention for this population as well as to the people who are preparing evaluation studies that measure the effectiveness of such interventions. The paper aims to discuss these issues.
DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The authors identified research papers in the peer-review literature that feature empirical findings on "football interventions" that aim at improving mental and/or physical well-being in participants with mental health problems. The authors are using the term "football intervention" here in the sense that the participants actively took part in football exercise, so the authors excluded studies in which the participants only watched football or used football as a metaphor to discuss mental health problems. In a table, the authors indicate the definition of the target group, targeted outcomes, measured outcomes, form and frequency of the intervention as well as the research method(s).
The authors identified 16 studies on 15 projects. The majority of studies were qualitative and had positive findings in which the participants reported increased well-being and connectedness, elevation of symptoms and improved physical well-being. The outcomes of the quantitative studies, however, were mixed with some results suggesting that not all intended goals were achieved. There seems to be a need for more quantitative studies to triangulate the qualitative findings. Interestingly, most interventions take place in the UK. Many studies fail to give detailed methodological information and often the aims of the interventions are vague or not stated at all.
RESEARCH LIMITATIONS/IMPLICATIONS: Due to the heterogeneity of the studies and relative scarcity of evaluation projects on football interventions for people with mental health problems, the authors could not conduct an in-depth systematic review. Furthermore, the information on methods was often unsatisfying and despite efforts to get more detailed input from the authors of cited papers, those gaps could not always be filled. Instead of coming up with a crystal-clear summary of whether and how football interventions work for everybody, topics were identified that need to be addressed in the planning of interventions, in evaluation studies, in implementation efforts and in the theoretical discourse.
This paper constitutes a helpful overview for everybody who is interested in the theoretical background of football interventions for people with mental health problems, for people who are planning to develop respective interventions, for researchers who engage in evaluation projects that look into the effectiveness of football interventions (or similar exercise interventions) as well as for the people who are interested in how football interventions can be implemented. This paper is likely to make a contribution to the advancement of alternative exercise interventions that aim at improving mental, physical and social health in people with mental health problems.
This paper will help putting the topic of football interventions (and similar, alternative exercise interventions) further up on the public health agenda by providing an overview of the empirical evidence at hand and by specifying advantages of the approach as well as pointing out actions that need to be taken to make football a recognised, evidence based and viable option for adjunct mental health treatment that is attractive to potential participants as well as funders as well as to the potential participants.
ORIGINALITY/VALUE: There is no comprehensive summary to date that provides a (reasonably) systematic overview of empirical findings for football interventions for people with MH problems. Furthermore, the literature on the theoretical background of these interventions has been somewhat patchy and heterogonous. This paper aims at filling both these gaps and identifies the issues that need to be covered in the planning of respective interventions and evaluations. This paper will be useful to everybody who is developing football interventions (or similar alternative adjunct exercise interventions), who is conducting evaluation research in this area and who is interested in the implementation of football interventions.
在过去几年中,足球运动作为一种针对严重心理健康问题人群的干预方式,受到了越来越多的关注。然而,迄今为止,尚未对这些干预措施有效性的实证证据进行全面综述。在本综述中,作者综合了同行评审文献中的研究结果以及将足球运动作为辅助治疗的理论方法。这一概述将为计划针对该人群开展足球干预的所有人以及准备进行评估研究以衡量此类干预措施有效性的人提供参考。本文旨在讨论这些问题。
设计/方法/途径:作者在同行评审文献中识别出关于“足球干预”的研究论文,这些研究旨在改善有心理健康问题参与者的心理和/或身体健康。作者在此使用“足球干预”一词,是指参与者积极参与足球运动,因此排除了参与者仅观看足球比赛或用足球作为隐喻来讨论心理健康问题的研究。作者在一个表格中指出了目标群体的定义、目标结果、测量结果、干预的形式和频率以及研究方法。
作者识别出了关于15个项目的16项研究。大多数研究是定性的,且有积极的结果,参与者报告幸福感增强、联系感增加、症状减轻以及身体健康改善。然而,定量研究的结果参差不齐,一些结果表明并非所有预期目标都得以实现。似乎需要更多的定量研究来验证定性研究结果。有趣的是,大多数干预发生在英国。许多研究未能提供详细的方法信息,而且干预的目标往往模糊不清或根本未明确说明。
研究局限性/启示:由于研究的异质性以及针对有心理健康问题人群的足球干预评估项目相对较少,作者无法进行深入的系统综述。此外,关于方法的信息往往不尽人意,尽管努力从被引用论文的作者那里获取更详细的信息,但这些差距并非总能填补。本文并未给出一个关于足球干预是否以及如何对所有人都有效的清晰明确的总结,而是确定了在干预规划、评估研究、实施工作以及理论探讨中需要解决的主题。
本文为对有心理健康问题人群的足球干预理论背景感兴趣的人、计划开展相关干预的人、参与评估足球干预(或类似运动干预)有效性项目的研究人员以及对足球干预如何实施感兴趣的人提供了有益的概述。本文可能会对旨在改善有心理健康问题人群的心理、身体和社会健康的替代性运动干预的发展做出贡献。
本文通过提供现有实证证据的概述、详细说明该方法的优势以及指出为使足球成为一种被认可的、基于证据且可行的辅助心理健康治疗选择(对潜在参与者、资助者以及潜在参与者都有吸引力)而需要采取的行动,有助于将足球干预(以及类似的替代性运动干预)这一话题进一步提上公共卫生议程。
原创性/价值:迄今为止,尚无全面总结能为有心理健康问题人群的足球干预实证研究结果提供(合理)系统的概述。此外,关于这些干预措施理论背景的文献有些零散且异质。本文旨在填补这两个空白,并确定在各自干预措施和评估的规划中需要涵盖的问题。本文将对开展足球干预(或类似替代性辅助运动干预)的人、在该领域进行评估研究的人以及对足球干预实施感兴趣的人有用。