Baldwin Jennifer Naomi, Purcell Kate, Hassett Leanne, Tiedemann Anne, Pinheiro Marina, Savage Roslyn, Wang Belinda, Haynes Abby, West Kerry, Noetel Michael, Richards Bethan, Jennings Matthew, Gupta Sandeep, Smith Ben J, Treacy Daniel, Halliday Mark, Harvey Lisa A, Phongsavan Philayrath, Rogers Kris, Howard Kirsten, Bauman Adrian, Hamdorf Phil, Shaw Ayden, Walkley Jeff, Dwyer Genevieve, Lonsdale Chris, Reece Lindsey, Clutterbuck Georgina, Lovitt Lorraine, Sturnieks Daina, Sherrington Catherine
Sydney Musculoskeletal Health, The University of Sydney Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Institute for Musculoskeletal Health, Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
BMJ Nutr Prev Health. 2024 Aug 6;7(2):e000901. doi: 10.1136/bmjnph-2024-000901. eCollection 2024.
Promotion of physical activity by health professionals can increase physical activity participation among patients, however, implementing physical activity promotion within hospital systems is lacking. The Promotion of Physical Activity by Health Professionals (PROMOTE-PA) study is a hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation cluster randomised controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of support for physical activity promotion by health professionals on physical activity participation of patients. Health professionals delivering outpatient healthcare services within four local health districts and one specialty health network in New South Wales, Australia will be included. The target patient population is children (5-17 years) and adults (18+ years) who are willing to receive additional support to be more physically active. The evidence-based intervention is brief physical activity promotion informed by the '5As' physical activity counselling model and behavioural theory, embedded into routine clinical practice. Our multi-faceted strategy to support implementation of physical activity promotion was developed based on preliminary research and consultation with key stakeholders. The implementation strategy includes education and training as well as a selection of the following (tailored to each clinical team): community referral strategies, experts and clinical mentors, and clinical champions. 30 outpatient clinical teams will be randomised to receive the implementation strategy immediately or after a 3-month delay (waitlist control). Each team will seek to recruit 10-30 patients (n=approx. 720) to report moderate-vigorous physical activity (minutes per week, primary outcome), frequency of balance and strength exercise, mobility, and quality of life at baseline, 3-month and 6-month post patient recruitment. This study aims to address the increasing burden of physical inactivity in a high-risk population using the existing health workforce. Australian and New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12623000920695).
卫生专业人员对身体活动的推广可增加患者对身体活动的参与度,然而,在医院系统内实施身体活动推广仍很欠缺。卫生专业人员身体活动推广(PROMOTE-PA)研究是一项混合型I期有效性-实施整群随机对照试验,旨在评估卫生专业人员对身体活动推广的支持对患者身体活动参与度的有效性。将纳入在澳大利亚新南威尔士州四个地方卫生区和一个专科卫生网络内提供门诊医疗服务的卫生专业人员。目标患者群体为愿意接受更多支持以增加身体活动的儿童(5至17岁)和成人(18岁及以上)。基于“5A”身体活动咨询模型和行为理论的简短身体活动推广是循证干预措施,并融入常规临床实践。我们基于初步研究以及与关键利益相关者的协商,制定了支持身体活动推广实施的多方面策略。实施策略包括教育与培训以及以下各项的选择(根据每个临床团队量身定制):社区转诊策略、专家和临床导师以及临床倡导者。30个门诊临床团队将被随机分组,立即接受实施策略或延迟3个月后接受(等待名单对照)。每个团队将试图招募10至30名患者(n=约720),以报告中度至剧烈身体活动(每周分钟数,主要结局)、平衡和力量锻炼频率、活动能力以及在患者招募后的基线、3个月和6个月时的生活质量。本研究旨在利用现有的卫生人力来解决高危人群中身体活动不足日益加重的负担。澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心(ACTRN12623000920695)。