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非家庭代际干预及其对年轻人和老年人社会与心理健康的影响——一项映射综述以及证据与差距图谱

Non-familial intergenerational interventions and their impact on social and mental wellbeing of both younger and older people-A mapping review and evidence and gap map.

作者信息

Campbell Fiona, Whear Rebecca, Rogers Morwenna, Sutton Anthea, Robinson-Carter Ellie, Barlow Jane, Sharpe Richard, Cohen Stuart, Wolstenholme Louise, Thompson-Coon Joanna

机构信息

Evidence Synthesis Group Population Health Sciences Institute Newcastle University Newcastle UK.

NIHR CLAHRC South West Peninsula (PenCLAHRC) University of Exeter Medical School Exeter UK.

出版信息

Campbell Syst Rev. 2023 Feb 16;19(1):e1306. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1306. eCollection 2023 Mar.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Opportunities for social connection between generations in the UK have diminished over the last few decades because of changes in the way that we live and work. The decline in communal spaces such as libraries, youth clubs and community centres mean that there are fewer opportunities to meet and mix socially with other generations outside our own families. Increased working hours, improved technology, changes in family patterns, relationship breakdowns within families and migration are also believed to be contributory factors to generation segregation. There are many potential economic, social and political impacts of generations living separate and parallel lives, for example, higher health and social care costs, an undermining of trust between generations reduced social capital, a reliance on the media to form understanding of others' viewpoints and higher levels of anxiety and loneliness. Intergenerational programmes and activities can take many forms and are delivered in many settings.  Evidence suggests that intergenerational activity can have a positive impact on participants, for example, in reducing loneliness and exclusion for both older people and children and young people, improving mental health, increasing mutual understanding and addressing important issues such as ageism, housing and care. There are currently no other EGMs that exist that address this type of intervention; however, it would complement existing EGMs addressing child welfare.

OBJECTIVES

To identify, appraise and bring together the evidence on the use of intergenerational practice, to answer the following specific research questions: What is the volume, nature and diversity of research on, and evaluation of, intergenerational practice and learning?What approaches have been used to deliver intergenerational activities and programmes that may be relevant to providing such services during and in the subsequent recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic?What promising intergenerational activities and programmes have been developed and are being used but have not yet been subject to formal evaluation?

SEARCH METHODS

We searched MEDLINE (via OvidSp), EMBASE (via OvidSp), PsycINFO (via OvidSp), CINAHL (via EBSCOHost), Social Policy and Practice (via OvidSp), Health Management Information Consortium (via OvidSp), Ageline (via EBSCOhost), ASSIA (via ProQuest), Social Science Citations Index (via Web of Science), ERIC (via EBSCOhost), Community Care Inform Children, Research in Practice for Children, ChildData (via Social Policy and Practice), the Campbell Library, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and the CENTRAL database between 22 and 30 July 2021. We searched for additional grey literature via the Conference Proceedings Citation Index (via Web of Science) and ProQuest Dissertation & Theses Global and via relevant organisation websites, for example, Age UK, Age International, the Centre for Ageing Better, Barnado's, Children's Commission, UNICEF, Generations Working Together, the Intergenerational Foundation, Linking Generations and The Beth Johnson Foundation) and the Ottawa initiative called Older Adults and Students for Intergenerational support.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Any intervention that brings older and younger people together with the purpose of interacting to achieve positive health and/or social and/or educational outcomes from any study design including systematic reviews, randomised controlled studies, observational studies, surveys and qualitative studies are included. The titles and abstracts, and later full texts, of records identified by the search methods were screened against inclusion criteria by two independent reviewers.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Data extraction was undertaken by one reviewer and checked by a second with any inconsistencies identified and resolved through discussion. The data extraction tool was developed on EPPI reviewer and was modified and tested through stakeholder and advisor consultation, and piloting of the process. The tool was informed by the research question and the structure of the map. We did not undertake quality appraisal of the included studies.

MAIN RESULTS

Our searches identified 12,056 references, after screening 500 research articles were included in the evidence gap map conducted across 27 countries. We identified 26 systematic reviews, 236 quantitative comparative studies (of which 38 were randomised controlled trials), 227 were qualitative studies (or had a qualitative element), 105 were observational studies (or had elements of observational methods) and 82 used a mixed methods approach. The outcomes reported in the research cover mental health ( = 73), physical health ( = 62), attainment and knowledge ( = 165), agency ( = 174), mental wellbeing ( = 224), loneliness and social isolation ( = 54), attitudes towards the other generation ( = 283), intergenerational interactions ( = 196), peer interactions ( = 30) and health promotion ( = 23) and including mutual outcomes such as the impact on community ( = 37) and perceptions on the sense of community ( = 43). Gaps in the evidence that were identified include: research that reports on mutual, societal and community outcomes of intergenerational interventions; more research on interventions classified as levels 1-4 and level 7 on the Intergenerational Engagement Scale, mental health, loneliness, social isolation, peer interactions, physical health and health promotion outcomes in children and young people; health promotion in older people; outcomes centred on care giver wellbeing, mental health and attitudes; economic outcomes; process outcomes and adverse or unexpected outcomes.

AUTHORS’ CONCLUSIONS: Whilst a substantional amount of research on intergenerational interventions has been identified in this EGM, as well as the gaps identified above, there is a need to explore promising interventions not yet formally evaluated. Research on this topic is gradually increasing, and systematic reviews will be important to determine how and why interventions are or are not beneficial. However, the primary research needs to build more cohesively so that the findings can be comparable and avoid research waste. The EGM presented here will nevertheless be a useful resource for decision-makers allowing them to explore the evidence with regard to the different interventions that may be relevant to their population needs and the settings or resources available to them.

摘要

背景

在过去几十年里,由于我们生活和工作方式的变化,英国代际间社会联系的机会有所减少。图书馆、青年俱乐部和社区中心等公共空间的减少意味着,在家庭之外与其他年龄段的人见面和社交的机会变少了。工作时间增加、技术进步、家庭模式变化、家庭关系破裂以及移民等因素也被认为是导致代际隔离的原因。代际间各自独立并行生活存在许多潜在的经济、社会和政治影响,例如,更高的医疗和社会护理成本、代际间信任的削弱、社会资本的减少、依赖媒体来形成对他人观点的理解以及更高程度的焦虑和孤独感。代际项目和活动可以有多种形式,并在许多环境中开展。有证据表明,代际活动可以对参与者产生积极影响,例如,减少老年人以及儿童和年轻人的孤独感和被排斥感、改善心理健康、增进相互理解以及解决诸如年龄歧视、住房和护理等重要问题。目前不存在其他专门针对这类干预措施的循证指南;然而,它将补充现有的关于儿童福利的循证指南。

目的

识别、评估并整合关于代际实践应用的证据,以回答以下具体研究问题:关于代际实践与学习的研究及评估的数量、性质和多样性是怎样的?在新冠疫情期间及后续恢复过程中提供此类服务时,有哪些用于开展代际活动和项目的方法可能是相关的?已经开发并正在使用但尚未经过正式评估的有前景的代际活动和项目有哪些?

检索方法

我们于2021年7月22日至30日检索了MEDLINE(通过OvidSp)、EMBASE(通过OvidSp)、PsycINFO(通过OvidSp)、CINAHL(通过EBSCOHost)、社会政策与实践(通过OvidSp)、健康管理信息联盟(通过OvidSp)、老龄信息库(通过EBSCOhost)、应用社会科学索引(通过ProQuest)、社会科学引文索引(通过Web of Science)以及教育资源信息中心(通过EBSCOhost)、社区护理儿童信息库、儿童实践研究、儿童数据(通过社会政策与实践)、坎贝尔图书馆、Cochrane系统评价数据库和CENTRAL数据库。我们通过会议论文引文索引(通过Web of Science)、ProQuest全球学位论文数据库以及相关组织网站(例如英国老龄协会、国际老龄协会、改善老龄中心、巴纳多斯儿童慈善机构、儿童委员会、联合国儿童基金会、代际合作组织、代际基金会、连接代际组织以及贝丝·约翰逊基金会)和渥太华倡议“老年人与学生跨代支持”,检索了其他灰色文献。

纳入标准

任何将老年人和年轻人聚集在一起,旨在通过互动实现积极的健康和/或社会和/或教育成果的干预措施,包括来自任何研究设计的系统评价、随机对照研究、观察性研究、调查和定性研究。由检索方法确定的记录的标题和摘要,以及之后的全文,由两名独立评审员根据纳入标准进行筛选。

数据收集与分析

数据提取由一名评审员进行,另一名评审员进行检查,任何不一致之处都通过讨论来识别和解决。数据提取工具是在EPPI评审器上开发的,并通过与利益相关者和顾问的协商以及该过程的试点进行了修改和测试。该工具依据研究问题和图谱结构进行设计。我们没有对纳入的研究进行质量评估。

主要结果

我们的检索共识别出12,056条参考文献,经过筛选后,27个国家的证据缺口图谱纳入了500篇研究文章。我们识别出了系统评价26篇、定量比较研究236篇(其中38篇为随机对照试验)、定性研究227篇(或包含定性元素)、观察性研究105篇(或包含观察性方法的元素)以及采用混合方法的研究82篇。研究中报告的结果涵盖心理健康(73项)、身体健康(62项)、学业成就与知识(165项)、能动性(174项)、心理幸福感(224项)、孤独感与社会隔离(54项)、对另一代人的态度(283项)、代际互动(196项)、同伴互动(30项)以及健康促进(23项),还包括对社区的影响(37项)和对社区感的认知(43项)等共同结果。所识别出的证据缺口包括:关于代际干预的相互、社会和社区结果的研究;对代际参与量表中1 - 4级和7级干预措施、儿童和年轻人的心理健康、孤独感、社会隔离、同伴互动、身体健康和健康促进结果的更多研究;老年人的健康促进;以照顾者幸福感、心理健康和态度为中心的结果;经济结果;过程结果以及不良或意外结果。

作者结论

虽然在本循证指南中识别出了大量关于代际干预的研究以及上述缺口,但仍有必要探索尚未经过正式评估的有前景的干预措施。关于这个主题的研究正在逐渐增加,系统评价对于确定干预措施如何以及为何有益或无益将很重要。然而,基础研究需要更紧密地结合起来,以便研究结果具有可比性并避免研究资源的浪费。尽管如此,这里呈现的循证指南将是决策者的有用资源,可以让他们探索与他们所服务人群的需求以及他们可利用的环境或资源相关的不同干预措施的证据。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cf7b/9934919/f47f1c21ea16/CL2-19-e1306-g003.jpg

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