Brennan Carol, Streight Evangeline, Cheng Shishi, Rhodes Ryan E
Behavioural Medicine Laboratory, School of Exercise Science, Physical and Health Education, University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada.
Department of Sport, Physical Education and Health, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Hong Kong Baptist University, Kowloon, Hong Kong.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2025 Jul 1;22(1):90. doi: 10.1186/s12966-025-01778-9.
Children and adolescents are at increased risk of adverse health consequences linked to physical inactivity. Parental support is positively correlated with children and adolescents' physical activity (PA) levels. As a result, family-based interventions are acknowledged as an effective strategy for enhancing PA among this cohort. However, the effects of these interventions on child and adolescent PA are often inconsistent, with calls for more in-depth understanding of the contextual issues related to intervention implementation and parents' experiences of interventions. The purpose of this review was to appraise and synthesize qualitative research regarding parents' experiences of family-based PA interventions.
Seven databases (MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SportDiscus, CINAHL, Web of Science, Scopus, and ProQuest) were searched for studies published from inception to January 2024 that included qualitative evaluative data of parents' experiences of family-based PA interventions. The research quality of included studies was appraised using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme. Qualitative data were extracted and thematically synthesized.
A total of 7,770 articles were screened, of which 82 independent studies were included in the final synthesis. Three analytic themes were generated. (1) The reasons why parents enrolled in family-based interventions and the perceived benefits for parents, children, and families; (2) Parents' perspectives on intervention components, including their satisfaction, coherence, and suggestions for improvement; (3) The social and environmental factors shaping parents' intervention experiences and parental PA support. Findings show the benefits of PA, being a good role model and spending time together as motives for enrollment. Parents perceived child or adolescent's PA confidence and overall well-being and family functioning improved. Parents presented mixed views about planning, goal setting, self-monitoring, intervention materials and resources, and delivery. Child or adolescents' interest, social connections, financial constraints and availability of resources impacted parental engagement.
This novel and comprehensive review offers practical recommendations to guide intervention development and inform future policy and practice such as: consider using co-design methods and social network analysis; promoting the benefits of PA on family functioning during recruitment; strengthening parents PA support identities; provide opportunities for social support for families post-intervention and educate coaches to create an environment of inclusivity and enjoyment.
PROSPERO CRD42023421539.
儿童和青少年因缺乏身体活动而面临健康不良后果的风险增加。父母的支持与儿童和青少年的身体活动(PA)水平呈正相关。因此,基于家庭的干预措施被认为是提高这一群体身体活动水平的有效策略。然而,这些干预措施对儿童和青少年身体活动的影响往往不一致,需要更深入地了解与干预实施相关的背景问题以及父母对干预措施的体验。本综述的目的是评估和综合关于父母对基于家庭的身体活动干预措施体验的定性研究。
检索了七个数据库(MEDLINE、PsycINFO、SportDiscus、CINAHL、Web of Science、Scopus和ProQuest),查找从数据库建库至2024年1月发表的研究,这些研究包括父母对基于家庭的身体活动干预措施体验的定性评估数据。使用批判性评估技能计划对纳入研究的质量进行评估。提取定性数据并进行主题综合分析。
共筛选了7770篇文章,其中82项独立研究纳入最终综合分析。产生了三个分析主题。(1)父母参与基于家庭的干预措施的原因以及对父母、儿童和家庭的感知益处;(2)父母对干预组成部分的看法,包括他们的满意度、连贯性以及改进建议;(3)塑造父母干预体验和父母身体活动支持的社会和环境因素。研究结果表明,身体活动的益处、成为良好榜样以及共度时光是参与干预的动机。父母认为儿童或青少年的身体活动自信心、整体幸福感和家庭功能得到了改善。父母对计划、目标设定、自我监测、干预材料和资源以及实施方式的看法不一。儿童或青少年的兴趣、社会关系、经济限制和资源可用性影响了父母的参与度。
这项新颖而全面的综述提供了实用建议,以指导干预措施的制定,并为未来的政策和实践提供参考,例如:考虑使用共同设计方法和社会网络分析;在招募过程中宣传身体活动对家庭功能的益处;强化父母作为身体活动支持者的身份;在干预后为家庭提供社会支持机会,并培训教练营造一个包容和有趣的环境。
PROSPERO CRD42023421539。