Department of Exercise Science, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2021 Sep 16;18(1):126. doi: 10.1186/s12966-021-01189-6.
Excessive screen time ([Formula: see text] 2 h per day) is associated with childhood overweight and obesity, physical inactivity, increased sedentary time, unfavorable dietary behaviors, and disrupted sleep. Previous reviews suggest intervening on screen time is associated with reductions in screen time and improvements in other obesogenic behaviors. However, it is unclear what study characteristics and behavior change techniques are potential mechanisms underlying the effectiveness of behavioral interventions. The purpose of this meta-analysis was to identify the behavior change techniques and study characteristics associated with effectiveness in behavioral interventions to reduce children's (0-18 years) screen time.
A literature search of four databases (Ebscohost, Web of Science, EMBASE, and PubMed) was executed between January and February 2020 and updated during July 2021. Behavioral interventions targeting reductions in children's (0-18 years) screen time were included. Information on study characteristics (e.g., sample size, duration) and behavior change techniques (e.g., information, goal-setting) were extracted. Data on randomization, allocation concealment, and blinding was extracted and used to assess risk of bias. Meta-regressions were used to explore whether intervention effectiveness was associated with the presence of behavior change techniques and study characteristics.
The search identified 15,529 articles, of which 10,714 were screened for relevancy and 680 were retained for full-text screening. Of these, 204 studies provided quantitative data in the meta-analysis. The overall summary of random effects showed a small, beneficial impact of screen time interventions compared to controls (SDM = 0.116, 95CI 0.08 to 0.15). Inclusion of the Goals, Feedback, and Planning behavioral techniques were associated with a positive impact on intervention effectiveness (SDM = 0.145, 95CI 0.11 to 0.18). Interventions with smaller sample sizes (n < 95) delivered over short durations (< 52 weeks) were associated with larger effects compared to studies with larger sample sizes delivered over longer durations. In the presence of the Goals, Feedback, and Planning behavioral techniques, intervention effectiveness diminished as sample size increased.
Both intervention content and context are important to consider when designing interventions to reduce children's screen time. As interventions are scaled, determining the active ingredients to optimize interventions along the translational continuum will be crucial to maximize reductions in children's screen time.
过度使用屏幕时间([公式:见正文] 每天 2 小时)与儿童超重和肥胖、身体活动不足、久坐时间增加、不良饮食行为和睡眠紊乱有关。先前的综述表明,干预屏幕时间与减少屏幕时间和改善其他致肥胖行为有关。然而,尚不清楚哪些研究特征和行为改变技术是行为干预有效性的潜在机制。本项荟萃分析的目的是确定与减少儿童(0-18 岁)屏幕时间的行为干预有效性相关的行为改变技术和研究特征。
2020 年 1 月至 2 月期间在四个数据库(Ebscohost、Web of Science、EMBASE 和 PubMed)进行文献检索,并于 2021 年 7 月进行更新。纳入了针对减少儿童(0-18 岁)屏幕时间的行为干预措施。提取了有关研究特征(例如样本量、持续时间)和行为改变技术(例如信息、设定目标)的信息。提取并使用随机化、分配隐藏和盲法的数据来评估偏倚风险。使用元回归来探索干预效果是否与行为改变技术和研究特征有关。
检索到 15529 篇文章,其中 10714 篇文章进行了相关性筛选,680 篇文章进行了全文筛选。其中,204 项研究提供了荟萃分析的定量数据。总体随机效应汇总显示,与对照组相比,屏幕时间干预具有较小但有益的影响(SMD=0.116,95%CI 0.08-0.15)。纳入目标、反馈和计划行为技术与干预效果呈正相关(SMD=0.145,95%CI 0.11-0.18)。与样本量较大(n>95)且持续时间较长(>52 周)的研究相比,样本量较小(n<95)且持续时间较短(<52 周)的干预措施效果更大。在存在目标、反馈和计划行为技术的情况下,随着样本量的增加,干预效果会减弱。
在设计减少儿童屏幕时间的干预措施时,干预内容和背景都很重要。随着干预措施的推广,确定沿转化连续体优化干预措施的有效成分对于最大限度地减少儿童的屏幕时间将至关重要。