Twelve-month outcomes of a community-based, father-daughter physical activity program delivered by trained facilitators

IF 5.6 1区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity Pub Date : 2024-09-11 DOI:10.1186/s12966-024-01648-w
Lee M. Ashton, Anna T. Rayward, Emma R. Pollock, Stevie-Lee Kennedy, Myles D. Young, Narelle Eather, Alyce T. Barnes, Daniel R. Lee, Philip J. Morgan
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Abstract

Dads and Daughters Exercising and Empowered (DADEE) is a program targeting fathers/father-figures to improve their daughters’ physical activity and well-being. Previous randomised controlled efficacy and effectiveness trials of DADEE demonstrated meaningful improvements in a range of holistic outcomes for both fathers and daughters in the short-term. This study aims to assess the long-term impact (12-months) of the program when delivered in the community by trained facilitators. Fathers/father-figures and their primary school-aged daughters were recruited from Newcastle, Australia into a single-arm, non-randomised, pre-post study with assessments at baseline, 10-weeks (post-intervention) and 12-months. The 9-session program included weekly 90-min educational and practical sessions, plus home-based tasks. The primary outcome was fathers’ and daughters’ days per week meeting national physical activity recommendations (≥ 30 min/day of MVPA for fathers, ≥ 60 min/day MVPA for daughters). Secondary outcomes included physical activity, screen time, self-esteem, father-daughter relationship, social-emotional well-being, parenting measures, and process outcomes (including recruitment, attendance, retention and program acceptability). Twelve programs were delivered with 257 fathers (40.0 ± 9.2 years) and 285 daughters (7.7 ± 1.9 years). Mixed effects regression models revealed significant intervention effects for the primary outcome, with fathers increasing the days/week meeting physical activity recommendations by 27% at 10-weeks (p < 0.001) and by 19% at 12-months (p < 0.001) compared with baseline. Likewise, for daughters there was a significant increase by 25% at 10-weeks (p < 0.001) and by 14% at 12-months (p = 0.02) when compared to baseline. After conducting a sensitivity analysis with participants unaffected by COVID-19 lockdowns (n = 175 fathers, n = 192 daughters), the primary outcome results strengthened at both time-points for fathers and at 12-months for daughters. Additionally, the sensitivity analysis revealed significant intervention effects at post-program and 12-months for all secondary outcomes in both fathers and daughters. Furthermore, the process outcomes for recruitment capability, attendance, retention and satisfaction levels were high. Findings provide support for a sustained effect of the DADEE program while delivered in a community setting by trained facilitators. Further investigation is required to identify optimised implementation processes and contextual factors to deliver the program at scale. ACTRN12617001450303 . Date registered: 12/10/2017.
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由训练有素的主持人实施的社区父女体育活动计划的 12 个月成果
爸爸和女儿锻炼与赋权(DADEE)是一项针对父亲/父亲角色的计划,旨在提高女儿的体育锻炼和健康水平。之前对 DADEE 进行的随机对照疗效和有效性试验表明,该计划在短期内对父亲和女儿的一系列整体结果都有显著改善。本研究旨在评估该计划由训练有素的辅导员在社区开展时所产生的长期影响(12 个月)。研究人员从澳大利亚纽卡斯尔招募了父亲/父亲角色及其小学适龄女儿,开展了一项单臂、非随机、前-后研究,分别在基线、10 周(干预后)和 12 个月进行评估。这项为期 9 个疗程的计划包括每周 90 分钟的教育和实践课程,以及基于家庭的任务。主要结果是父亲和女儿每周达到国家体育活动建议的天数(父亲的 MVPA ≥ 30 分钟/天,女儿的 MVPA ≥ 60 分钟/天)。次要结果包括体育活动、屏幕时间、自尊、父女关系、社会情感幸福、养育措施和过程结果(包括招募、出席、保留和计划可接受性)。共实施了 12 项计划,有 257 名父亲(40.0 ± 9.2 岁)和 285 名女儿(7.7 ± 1.9 岁)参加。混合效应回归模型显示,对主要结果的干预效果显著,与基线相比,父亲每周达到体育锻炼建议的天数在 10 周时增加了 27%(p < 0.001),在 12 个月时增加了 19%(p < 0.001)。同样,与基线相比,女儿的运动量在 10 周时显著增加了 25%(p < 0.001),在 12 个月时显著增加了 14%(p = 0.02)。在对不受 COVID-19 禁闭影响的参与者(n = 175 名父亲,n = 192 名女儿)进行敏感性分析后,父亲的主要结果在两个时间点和女儿的主要结果在 12 个月时都得到了加强。此外,敏感性分析表明,对于父亲和女儿的所有次要结果,在项目结束后和 12 个月时,干预效果都很显著。此外,招募能力、出勤率、保留率和满意度等过程结果也很高。研究结果为 DADEE 项目在社区环境中由训练有素的主持人实施时的持续效果提供了支持。还需要进一步调查,以确定优化的实施流程和背景因素,从而大规模实施该计划。Actrn12617001450303 .注册日期:12/10/2017。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.80
自引率
3.40%
发文量
138
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity (IJBNPA) is an open access, peer-reviewed journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain. IJBNPA is devoted to furthering the understanding of the behavioral aspects of diet and physical activity and is unique in its inclusion of multiple levels of analysis, including populations, groups and individuals and its inclusion of epidemiology, and behavioral, theoretical and measurement research areas.
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