Assessing the scalability of evidence-based healthy eating and physical activity interventions in early childhood education and care: A cross-sectional study of end-user perspectives

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health Pub Date : 2024-01-09 DOI:10.1016/j.anzjph.2023.100122
Alice Grady , Jacklyn Jackson , Luke Wolfenden , Melanie Lum , Andrew Milat , Adrian Bauman , Rebecca Hodder , Sze Lin Yoong
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Abstract

Objectives

To describe early childhood education and care (ECEC) services: i) perceptions regarding the scalability of healthy eating and physical activity interventions; and ii) associations between scalability and service characteristics.

Methods

A cross-sectional survey was conducted with a randomly selected sample of ECEC services across Australia. The scalability of 12 healthy eating and physical activity interventions was assessed using items based on the Intervention Scalability Assessment Tool. Higher scores represented higher perceived scalability.

Results

From 453 participants, the highest scoring healthy eating and physical activity interventions were ‘providing healthy eating education and activities for children’ (M43.05) (out of 50) and ‘providing sufficient opportunities for child physical activity’ (M41.43). The lowest scoring was ‘providing families with lunchbox guidelines’ (M38.99) and ‘engaging families in activities to increase child physical activity’ (M38.36). Services located in rural areas, compared to urban areas, scored the overall scalability of both healthy eating and physical activity interventions significantly lower.

Conclusions

Perceptions regarding the scalability of healthy eating and physical activity interventions in the ECEC setting vary according to service characteristics.

Implications for public health

Findings identify where government investment and implementation efforts may be prioritised to facilitate scale-up. An investigation into the barriers and support required for lower-scoring interventions is warranted.

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评估幼儿教育和保育中以证据为基础的健康饮食和体育活动干预措施的可扩展性:关于最终用户观点的横断面研究
目标描述幼儿教育和保育(ECEC)服务:i)对健康饮食和体育锻炼干预措施可扩展性的看法;ii)可扩展性与服务特点之间的关联。方法对澳大利亚各地随机抽取的幼儿教育和保育服务进行横断面调查。采用干预措施可扩展性评估工具(Intervention Scalability Assessment Tool)中的项目对 12 项健康饮食和体育活动干预措施的可扩展性进行了评估。结果从 453 名参与者中,得分最高的健康饮食和体育锻炼干预措施是 "为儿童提供健康饮食教育和活动"(M43.05)(满分 50 分)和 "为儿童提供足够的体育锻炼机会"(M41.43)。得分最低的是 "为家庭提供午餐盒指南"(M38.99)和 "让家庭参与增加儿童体育活动的活动"(M38.36)。与城市地区相比,位于农村地区的服务机构对健康饮食和体力活动干预措施的整体可推广性的评分明显较低。结论对幼儿保育和教育环境中健康饮食和体力活动干预措施可推广性的看法因服务特点而异。有必要对得分较低的干预措施所面临的障碍和所需的支持进行调查。
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来源期刊
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
5.70%
发文量
121
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health (ANZJPH) is concerned with public health issues. The research reported includes formal epidemiological inquiries into the correlates and causes of diseases and health-related behaviour, analyses of public policy affecting health and disease, and detailed studies of the cultures and social structures within which health and illness exist. The Journal is multidisciplinary and aims to publish methodologically sound research from any of the academic disciplines that constitute public health.
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