Jeet Gursimer, Thakur Jarnail Singh, Prinja Shankar, Singh Meenu, Paika Ronika, Kunjan Kunjan, Dhadwal Priya
School of Public Health, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
Advanced Paediatric Centre, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh, India.
BMJ Open. 2018 Jun 27;8(6):e014559. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014559.
Settings-based approaches to health promotion, involving holistic and multidisciplinary methods, which integrate action across risk factors are important. Major advantage of focusing on these settings is the continuous and intensive contact with the participant. Despite the apparent advantages of addressing non-communicable diseases (NCDs) using targeted interventions for several developed country settings, a relative lack of evidence of effectiveness of such interventions in low/middle-income countries has led to poor allocation of resources towards these interventions. The focus is therefore on the settings rather than any one condition, and we therefore expect the findings to generalise to NCD prevention and control efforts. We intend to estimate the effectiveness of targeted interventions in low/middle-income countries.
We will search PubMed, Excerpta Medica Database, OVID, WHO Library and The Cochrane Library from the year 2000 to March 2018 without language restrictions. Study designs to be included will be randomised controlled trials. The primary outcome of effectiveness will be the percentage change in population having different behavioural risk factors. Subgroup analyses will be performed, and sensitivity analyses will be conducted to assess the robustness of the findings.
No ethical issues are foreseen. The Institute Ethics Committee of the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research approved the doctoral research protocol under which this review is being done. Dissemination will be done by submitting scientific articles to academic peer-reviewed journals. We will present the results at relevant conferences and meetings.
Systematic review.
CRD42016042647; Pre-results.
基于环境的健康促进方法,涉及整体和多学科方法,整合针对多种风险因素的行动,这很重要。关注这些环境的主要优势在于与参与者持续且密切的接触。尽管在一些发达国家环境中,使用针对性干预措施应对非传染性疾病(NCDs)有明显优势,但在低收入/中等收入国家,此类干预措施有效性的证据相对不足,导致对这些干预措施的资源分配不佳。因此,重点在于环境而非任何一种疾病状况,所以我们期望研究结果能推广至非传染性疾病的预防和控制工作。我们打算评估低收入/中等收入国家针对性干预措施的有效性。
我们将检索2000年至2018年3月期间的PubMed、医学文摘数据库、OVID、世界卫生组织图书馆和考科蓝图书馆,无语言限制。纳入的研究设计将为随机对照试验。有效性的主要结局将是具有不同行为风险因素的人群的百分比变化。将进行亚组分析,并开展敏感性分析以评估研究结果的稳健性。
预计不存在伦理问题。医学教育与研究研究生学院的机构伦理委员会批准了进行本综述的博士研究方案。传播将通过向学术同行评审期刊提交科学文章来完成。我们将在相关会议上展示研究结果。
系统综述。
PROSPERO注册号:CRD42016042647;预结果。