Faculty of Land and Food Systems, Food, Nutrition and Health, the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Healthy Starts, British Columbia Children's Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2023 Feb 14;20(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s12966-023-01424-2.
Consuming a balanced diet and regular activity have health benefits. However, many adults have a difficult time adhering to diet and activity recommendations, especially in lifestyle interventions. Adherence to recommendations could be improved if common facilitators and barriers are accounted for in intervention design. The aim of this systematic review was to understand perceived barriers and facilitators to lifestyle (diet and/or activity) intervention guidelines.
This review follows the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis guidelines. Studies included relied on qualitative methods to explore the barriers and facilitators healthy adults ([Formula: see text] 18 years) experienced in lifestyle interventions. Google Scholar, Cochrane Reviews, Medline, PubMed, and Web of Science were searched from January 2005 to October 2021. Main themes from each paper were thematically analyzed and reported as a barrier or facilitator to adherence at the individual, environment or intervention level using inductively derived themes. Study quality was assessed using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme.
Thirty-five papers were included. Of these, 46% were conducted in North America and the majority had more female participants (86% in mixed-sex studies, 26% females only). Similar themes emerged across all three levels as facilitators and barriers. At the individual level, attitudes, concern for health and physical changes. At the environmental level, social support, social accountability, changeable and unchangeable aspects of the community. Finally, delivery and design and content at the intervention level. An additional facilitator at the intervention level included fostering self-regulation through Behavior Change Taxonomies (BCT).
Lifestyle interventions that foster self-regulatory skills, opportunities for social engagement and personalization of goals may improve behaviour adherence. This can be achieved through inclusion of BCT, tapering off of intervention supports, identification of meaningful goals and anticipated barriers with participants.
均衡饮食和规律运动对健康有益。然而,许多成年人难以遵守饮食和运动建议,尤其是在生活方式干预中。如果在干预设计中考虑到常见的促进因素和障碍,那么对建议的遵守情况可能会得到改善。本系统评价的目的是了解生活方式(饮食和/或活动)干预指南中被感知到的障碍和促进因素。
本综述遵循系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目指南。纳入的研究依赖于定性方法来探索生活方式干预中健康成年人([Formula: see text] 18 岁)经历的障碍和促进因素。从 2005 年 1 月到 2021 年 10 月,在 Google Scholar、Cochrane Reviews、Medline、PubMed 和 Web of Science 上进行了检索。使用归纳法得出的主题,对每篇论文的主要主题进行主题分析,并在个体、环境或干预水平上报告为遵守的障碍或促进因素。使用批判性评估技能计划评估研究质量。
共纳入 35 篇论文。其中,46%的研究在美国进行,大多数研究的女性参与者较多(混合性别研究中 86%,仅女性参与者中 26%)。所有三个层面的相似主题都作为促进因素和障碍出现。在个体层面上,态度、对健康的关注和身体变化。在环境层面上,社会支持、社会责任感、社区中可改变和不可改变的方面。最后,干预层面的交付、设计和内容。干预层面的另一个促进因素包括通过行为改变分类法(BCT)培养自我调节技能。
促进自我调节技能、社交机会和目标个性化的生活方式干预可能会提高行为依从性。这可以通过包含 BCT、逐渐减少干预支持、与参与者共同确定有意义的目标和预期障碍来实现。