School of Sport Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
School of Sport Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Jul 29;14(7):e086345. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-086345.
Dancers are expected to navigate major challenges in their careers that might take a toll on their physical and mental health. To address underlying factors that might increase dancers' mental and physical health difficulties, research suggests the systematic use of techniques to build mental skills that can reduce risk factors and enhance protective factors against the challenges dancers encounter. However, existing mental skills training interventions in dance present a lack of consistency in design, content and duration, making it difficult to provide evidence-based recommendations. Hence, dance researchers and practitioners would benefit from a mixed methods systematic review (MMSR) of the why, what and how of these interventions. Adopting tools such as the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) can aid this endeavour by describing replicable aspects of interventions, thus offering dance researchers suggestions on how to understand, appraise and report intervention characteristics and processes in dance. Therefore, this protocol outlines a MMSR that will employ TIDieR to identify and assess characteristics of mental skills interventions in dance.
A systematic search will be undertaken in Psycinfo, Medline, Embase, Sportdiscus, Web of Science and the first 30 pages of GoogleScholar. Following the search, two reviewers will independently screen identified studies in Covidence. One reviewer will extract data using the TIDieR framework and the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (MMAT) for quality appraisal, while a second reviewer will check a sample of extracted studies for accuracy. A convergent integrated synthesis will be conducted where quantitative and qualitative evidence will be integrated by qualitising the quantitative data into textual descriptions.
There is no requirement for ethical approval for this systematic review as no empirical data will be collected. The findings will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication in a scientific journal and presentations in several different forums (eg, a dance psychology network, at scientific and applied conferences).
CRD42024537249.
舞者在职业生涯中面临着巨大的挑战,这些挑战可能会对他们的身心健康造成影响。为了解决可能增加舞者心理和身体健康困难的潜在因素,研究表明系统地使用技术来建立心理技能可以减少风险因素,并增强舞者应对挑战的保护因素。然而,现有的舞蹈心理技能训练干预措施在设计、内容和持续时间上缺乏一致性,因此难以提供基于证据的建议。因此,舞蹈研究人员和从业者将从对这些干预措施的“为什么”“是什么”和“怎么做”的混合方法系统评价(MMSR)中受益。采用模板干预描述和复制(TIDieR)等工具可以通过描述干预措施的可复制方面来帮助这一努力,从而为舞蹈研究人员提供有关如何理解、评估和报告舞蹈中干预特征和过程的建议。因此,本方案概述了一项 MMSR,该研究将使用 TIDieR 来确定和评估舞蹈中心理技能干预措施的特征。
将在 Psycinfo、Medline、Embase、Sportdiscus、Web of Science 和 Google Scholar 的前 30 页中进行系统搜索。搜索后,两名评审员将在 Covidence 中独立筛选确定的研究。一名评审员将使用 TIDieR 框架和混合方法评估工具(MMAT)提取数据进行质量评估,而第二名评审员将检查提取研究的样本以确保准确性。将进行收敛综合合成,其中定量和定性证据将通过将定量数据转化为文字描述进行整合。
由于本系统评价不收集实证数据,因此无需进行伦理批准。研究结果将通过在科学期刊上发表同行评议的出版物和在多个不同论坛(例如,舞蹈心理学网络、科学和应用会议)上的演示来传播。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42024537249。