School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW, Australia.
Hunter Medical Research Institute, New Lambton Heights, NSW, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2022 Aug 29;8(8):CD011677. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011677.pub3.
Several school-based interventions are effective in improving child diet and physical activity, and preventing excessive weight gain, and tobacco or harmful alcohol use. However, schools are frequently unsuccessful in implementing such evidence-based interventions.
We used standard, extensive Cochrane search methods. The latest search was between 1 September 2016 and 30 April 2021 to identify any relevant trials published since the last published review.
We defined 'Implementation' as the use of strategies to adopt and integrate evidence-based health interventions and to change practice patterns within specific settings. We included any trial (randomised controlled trial (RCT) or non-randomised controlled trial (non-RCT)) conducted at any scale, with a parallel control group that compared a strategy to implement policies or practices to address diet, physical activity, overweight or obesity, tobacco or alcohol use by students to 'no intervention', 'usual' practice or a different implementation strategy.
We used standard Cochrane methods. Given the large number of outcomes reported, we selected and included the effects of a single outcome measure for each trial for the primary (implementation) and secondary (student health behaviour and obesity) outcomes using a decision hierarchy. Where possible, we calculated standardised mean differences (SMDs) to account for variable outcome measures with 95% confidence intervals (CI). For RCTs, we conducted meta-analyses of primary and secondary outcomes using a random-effects model, or in instances where there were between two and five studies, a fixed-effect model. The synthesis of the effects for non-randomised studies followed the 'Synthesis without meta-analysis' (SWiM) guidelines.
We included an additional 11 trials in this update bringing the total number of included studies in the review to 38. Of these, 22 were conducted in the USA. Twenty-six studies used RCT designs. Seventeen trials tested strategies to implement healthy eating, 12 physical activity and six a combination of risk factors. Just one trial sought to increase the implementation of interventions to delay initiation or reduce the consumption of alcohol. All trials used multiple implementation strategies, the most common being educational materials, educational outreach and educational meetings. The overall certainty of evidence was low and ranged from very low to moderate for secondary review outcomes. Pooled analyses of RCTs found, relative to a control, the use of implementation strategies may result in a large increase in the implementation of interventions in schools (SMD 1.04, 95% CI 0.74 to 1.34; 22 RCTs, 1917 participants; low-certainty evidence). For secondary outcomes we found, relative to control, the use of implementation strategies to support intervention implementation may result in a slight improvement on measures of student diet (SMD 0.08, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.15; 11 RCTs, 16,649 participants; low-certainty evidence) and physical activity (SMD 0.09, 95% CI -0.02 to 0.19; 9 RCTs, 16,389 participants; low-certainty evidence). The effects on obesity probably suggest little to no difference (SMD -0.02, 95% CI -0.05 to 0.02; 8 RCTs, 18,618 participants; moderate-certainty evidence). The effects on tobacco use are very uncertain (SMD -0.03, 95% CIs -0.23 to 0.18; 3 RCTs, 3635 participants; very low-certainty evidence). One RCT assessed measures of student alcohol use and found strategies to support implementation may result in a slight increase in use (odds ratio 1.10, 95% CI 0.77 to 1.56; P = 0.60; 2105 participants). Few trials reported the economic evaluations of implementation strategies, the methods of which were heterogeneous and evidence graded as very uncertain. A lack of consistent terminology describing implementation strategies was an important limitation of the review.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The use of implementation strategies may result in large increases in implementation of interventions, and slight improvements in measures of student diet, and physical activity. Further research is required to assess the impact of implementation strategies on such behavioural- and obesity-related outcomes, including on measures of alcohol use, where the findings of one trial suggest it may slightly increase student risk. Given the low certainty of the available evidence for most measures further research is required to guide efforts to facilitate the translation of evidence into practice in this setting.
一些基于学校的干预措施在改善儿童饮食和身体活动、预防体重过度增加以及预防烟草或有害酒精使用方面非常有效。然而,学校在实施这些基于证据的干预措施方面常常不成功。
我们使用了标准的、广泛的 Cochrane 检索方法。最新的检索是在 2016 年 9 月 1 日至 2021 年 4 月 30 日之间进行的,以确定自上次发表的综述以来发布的任何相关试验。
我们将“实施”定义为使用策略来采用和整合基于证据的健康干预措施,并在特定环境中改变实践模式。我们包括了任何规模的试验(随机对照试验 (RCT) 或非随机对照试验 (非 RCT)),与“无干预”、“常规”实践或不同实施策略相比,有一个平行的对照组,该对照组比较了实施政策或实践以解决学生饮食、身体活动、超重或肥胖、烟草或酒精使用的策略。
我们使用了标准的 Cochrane 方法。鉴于报告的结果数量众多,我们为每个试验选择并包含了单一结果测量值的效果,用于主要(实施)和次要(学生健康行为和肥胖)结果,使用决策层次结构。在可能的情况下,我们使用标准化平均差异 (SMD) 来考虑具有 95%置信区间 (CI) 的变量结果测量值。对于 RCT,我们使用随机效应模型对主要和次要结果进行了荟萃分析,如果有两个到五个研究,则使用固定效应模型。非随机研究的效果综合遵循“无荟萃分析的综合”(SWiM) 指南。
我们在本次更新中增加了 11 项试验,使本综述中纳入的研究总数达到 38 项。其中 22 项在美国进行。26 项研究使用了 RCT 设计。17 项试验测试了健康饮食的实施策略,12 项测试了身体活动,6 项测试了风险因素的组合。只有一项试验试图增加干预措施实施的实施策略,以延迟开始或减少酒精消费。所有试验都使用了多种实施策略,最常见的是教育材料、教育外展和教育会议。总体证据确定性低,从极低到中度不等,适用于次要审查结果。RCT 的汇总分析发现,与对照组相比,使用实施策略可能会导致学校干预措施的实施大大增加(SMD 1.04,95%CI 0.74 至 1.34;22 项 RCT,1917 名参与者;低确定性证据)。对于次要结果,我们发现与对照组相比,支持干预实施的实施策略的使用可能会导致学生饮食(SMD 0.08,95%CI 0.02 至 0.15;11 项 RCT,16649 名参与者;低确定性证据)和身体活动(SMD 0.09,95%CI -0.02 至 0.19;9 项 RCT,16389 名参与者;低确定性证据)的措施略有改善。肥胖的影响可能表明几乎没有差异(SMD -0.02,95%CI -0.05 至 0.02;8 项 RCT,18618 名参与者;中等确定性证据)。烟草使用的影响非常不确定(SMD -0.03,95%CI -0.23 至 0.18;3 项 RCT,3635 名参与者;极低确定性证据)。一项 RCT 评估了支持实施的策略对学生饮酒的影响,发现这些策略可能会导致饮酒量略有增加(比值比 1.10,95%CI 0.77 至 1.56;P = 0.60;2105 名参与者)。很少有试验报告实施策略的经济评估,其方法具有异质性,证据被评为非常不确定。缺乏描述实施策略的一致术语是本综述的一个重要限制。
使用实施策略可能会大大增加干预措施的实施,并且略微改善学生饮食和身体活动的衡量标准。需要进一步研究来评估实施策略对这些行为和肥胖相关结果的影响,包括一项试验表明它可能会略微增加学生的风险的酒精使用的衡量标准。鉴于大多数措施的证据确定性较低,需要进一步研究来指导在这一背景下促进将证据转化为实践的努力。