O'Brien Tanya, Darker Catherine D, Mockler David, Barrett Emer M
Physiotherapy, The University of Dublin Trinity College, Dublin, Leinster, Ireland.
Public Health & Primary Care, The University of Dublin Trinity College, Dublin, Leinster, Ireland.
HRB Open Res. 2024 Dec 24;7:6. doi: 10.12688/hrbopenres.13834.1. eCollection 2024.
Physical activity is essential for youth physical and mental health, yet just 15% of adolescent girls versus 22% of adolescent boys worldwide meet the World Health Organization guideline of at least an average of 60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity per day. As activity patterns established in adolescence often persist into adulthood, there is a looming risk of adverse health outcomes due to insufficient physical activity. A persistent challenge faced by physical activity providers, however, is recruiting adolescent girls into their programmes. This systematic review will quantitatively synthesise existing knowledge surrounding the recruitment of adolescent girls into physical activity interventions and aims to provide evidence-based recommendations for optimal recruitment practices.
Five electronic databases will be searched to identify randomised controlled trials of physical activity interventions for adolescent girls worldwide. Hand-searches of reference lists of included randomised controlled trials, relevant systematic reviews, and author publications will also be conducted. Data will be extracted regarding study, participant, and intervention characteristics, pre-determined recruitment goals, recruitment strategies employed, and the number of participants screened, eligible, approached, randomised, and retained. Outcomes will include whether pre-determined recruitment goals were met, recruitment rate, and any adapted or extended recruitment measures required mid-study. Descriptive statistics, including the median recruitment rate for all included studies, will be calculated and stratified by subgroups such as the type or setting of physical activity. Recruitment strategies will be categorised, and the percentage of studies using each category, along with their associated recruitment rates, will be documented. If sufficient studies are found, multi-variable regression will be employed to determine if the use of a specific recruitment strategy increases enrolment.
Application of the findings of this review by physical activity programme providers may enhance their recruitment processes, potentially increasing teenage girls' physical activity enrolment worldwide.
PROSPERO CRD#42023475858.
体育活动对青少年的身心健康至关重要,但全球只有15%的少女和22%的少男达到了世界卫生组织的指导标准,即平均每天至少进行60分钟的中等至剧烈体育活动。由于青少年时期形成的活动模式往往会持续到成年,体育活动不足会带来健康不良后果的潜在风险。然而,体育活动提供者面临的一个持续挑战是招募少女参加他们的项目。本系统评价将定量综合现有关于招募少女参加体育活动干预措施的知识,并旨在为最佳招募实践提供循证建议。
将检索五个电子数据库,以识别全球范围内针对少女的体育活动干预的随机对照试验。还将对纳入的随机对照试验、相关系统评价和作者出版物的参考文献列表进行手工检索。将提取有关研究、参与者和干预特征、预先确定的招募目标、采用的招募策略以及筛选、符合条件、接触、随机分组和保留的参与者数量的数据。结果将包括是否达到预先确定的招募目标、招募率以及研究中期所需的任何调整或扩展的招募措施。将计算描述性统计数据,包括所有纳入研究的中位数招募率,并按体育活动类型或环境等亚组进行分层。将对招募策略进行分类,并记录使用每种策略的研究百分比及其相关招募率。如果发现足够的研究,将采用多变量回归来确定使用特定招募策略是否会增加入组人数。
体育活动项目提供者应用本评价的结果可能会改进他们的招募流程,有可能增加全球少女参加体育活动的人数。
PROSPERO CRD#42023475858。