Peng Zhou , Yin Li , Patrick WC. Lau , Liang Yan , Huiqi Song , Tony Lei Shi
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This study aims to systematically review the current literature concerning the effectiveness of parent-based eHealth intervention on the physical activity, dietary behaviors, and sleep of preschoolers.</p></div><div><h3>Method</h3><p>This systematic review conforms to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis statement. Six databases (EMBASE, PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science, SPORTDiscus, and PsycINFO) were retrieved for the period from January 2000 to December 2022. Studies were eligible if 1 they were quantitative study design; 2 eHealth interventions in which parents were the change agents targeted children aged 3–6 years; 3 interventions examined the effectiveness of eHealth or incorporated eHealth as one of the intervention modalities; 4 at least one variable included in either primary or secondary outcome had to concentrate on the physical activity, diet, and sleep of preschoolers; 5 publication type was limited to the English language and peer-reviewed journal articles; 6 study settings were confined to family- or parent-based ones. The risk of bias was assessed, based upon Version 2 of the Cochrane risk-of-tool for randomized trials (RoB2).</p></div><div><h3>Results</h3><p>Twelve studies were screened. No significant group-by-time improvement in physical activity was found in studies related to physical activity outcomes. Two studies reported a significant difference between groups concerning motor ability, with one study indicating improved object control with the other reporting improvement in both object control and locomotor skills. Of the studies related to dietary behavior outcomes, six studies reported a significant difference at the posttest compared to the control group, in terms of vegetable and fruit intake, sugar-sweetened drinks, reduced candy consumption, and improved non-core food. Three studies reported a significant difference between groups in sleep duration at the end of the posttest, with the result of one study limited to preference-only participants. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
学龄前儿童的生活方式已经变得缺乏运动和久坐不动,他们的饮食习惯不健康,他们的睡眠习惯越来越受到干扰。父母的参与似乎对改变学龄前儿童不健康的生活方式至关重要。由于传统面对面干预措施存在公认的障碍,容易获得和较低的成本使电子保健(eHealth)干预措施具有吸引力。然而,基于父母的电子健康干预是否可以用来改善学龄前儿童的上述生活方式行为目前尚不清楚,这是本系统综述旨在解决的一个空白。本研究旨在系统回顾当前关于基于父母的电子健康干预对学龄前儿童身体活动、饮食行为和睡眠的有效性的文献。方法本系统评价符合系统评价首选报告项目和荟萃分析声明。检索了2000年1月至2022年12月期间的六个数据库(EMBASE、PubMed、MEDLINE、Web of Science、SPORTDiscus和PsycINFO)。如果1是定量研究设计,则研究是合格的;2项以父母为变革推动者的电子卫生干预措施针对3-6岁儿童;3项干预检查了电子健康的有效性或将电子健康纳入干预模式之一;在主要或次要结果中,至少有一个变量与学龄前儿童的身体活动、饮食和睡眠有关;5 .发表类型仅限于英文和同行评议的期刊文章;6个研究环境仅限于家庭或以父母为基础的环境。根据Cochrane随机试验风险工具(RoB2)版本2评估偏倚风险。结果共筛选12项研究。在与体力活动结果相关的研究中,没有发现按时间分组的体力活动显著改善。两项研究报告了两组之间在运动能力方面的显著差异,一项研究表明物体控制能力得到改善,另一项研究表明物体控制能力和运动技能都得到改善。在与饮食行为结果相关的研究中,有6项研究报告了与对照组相比,在蔬菜和水果摄入量、含糖饮料、减少糖果摄入量和改善非核心食物方面的后测显著差异。三项研究报告说,在测试结束时,各组之间的睡眠时间有显著差异,其中一项研究的结果仅限于偏好参与者。在回顾的研究中,没有一项发现两组人在睡眠问题上有显著差异。结论基于家长的电子健康干预在改善学龄前儿童身体活动和减少睡眠问题方面没有显著效果,但大多数研究发现,这种类型的干预可以显著改善学龄前儿童的饮食行为和睡眠时间。需要高质量、设计可靠的研究来平衡干预剂量和顺序,以调查基于父母的电子健康干预对学龄前儿童的身体活动、饮食行为和睡眠的有效性,特别是那些在其他文化背景下长大的儿童,这可能会显著影响他们的生活方式。试验注册国际前瞻性系统评价注册(PROSPERO): CRD42023418861。
Effectiveness of parent-based electronic health (eHealth) intervention on physical activity, dietary behaviors, and sleep in preschoolers: A systematic review
Background
The lifestyles of preschoolers have become physically inactive and sedentary, their eating habits unhealthy, and their sleep routines increasingly disturbed. Parental involvement appears crucial to combat the unhealthy lifestyle of preschoolers. Because of the recognized barriers to traditional face-to-face interventions, easy access and lower costs make electronic health (eHealth) interventions appealing. However, whether parent-based eHealth intervention may be harnessed to improve the aforementioned lifestyle behaviors of preschoolers is currently unclear, a gap that this systematic review intends to address. This study aims to systematically review the current literature concerning the effectiveness of parent-based eHealth intervention on the physical activity, dietary behaviors, and sleep of preschoolers.
Method
This systematic review conforms to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis statement. Six databases (EMBASE, PubMed, MEDLINE, Web of Science, SPORTDiscus, and PsycINFO) were retrieved for the period from January 2000 to December 2022. Studies were eligible if 1 they were quantitative study design; 2 eHealth interventions in which parents were the change agents targeted children aged 3–6 years; 3 interventions examined the effectiveness of eHealth or incorporated eHealth as one of the intervention modalities; 4 at least one variable included in either primary or secondary outcome had to concentrate on the physical activity, diet, and sleep of preschoolers; 5 publication type was limited to the English language and peer-reviewed journal articles; 6 study settings were confined to family- or parent-based ones. The risk of bias was assessed, based upon Version 2 of the Cochrane risk-of-tool for randomized trials (RoB2).
Results
Twelve studies were screened. No significant group-by-time improvement in physical activity was found in studies related to physical activity outcomes. Two studies reported a significant difference between groups concerning motor ability, with one study indicating improved object control with the other reporting improvement in both object control and locomotor skills. Of the studies related to dietary behavior outcomes, six studies reported a significant difference at the posttest compared to the control group, in terms of vegetable and fruit intake, sugar-sweetened drinks, reduced candy consumption, and improved non-core food. Three studies reported a significant difference between groups in sleep duration at the end of the posttest, with the result of one study limited to preference-only participants. None of the reviewed studies found a significant difference between groups for sleep problems.
Conclusion
Parent-based eHealth interventions were not significantly effective in improving physical activity and reducing sleep problems in preschoolers, but the majority of studies have found that this type of intervention significantly improves the dietary behaviors and sleep duration of preschoolers. High-quality, robustly designed studies to balance the intervention dosage and sequence are needed to investigate the effectiveness of parent-based eHealth intervention on physical activity, dietary behaviors, and sleep in preschoolers, particularly those raised in other cultural background, which may significantly impact their lifestyle.
Trial registration
International Prospective Register of Systematic Review (PROSPERO): CRD42023418861.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Exercise Science and Fitness is the official peer-reviewed journal of The Society of Chinese Scholars on Exercise Physiology and Fitness (SCSEPF), the Physical Fitness Association of Hong Kong, China (HKPFA), and the Hong Kong Association of Sports Medicine and Sports Science (HKASMSS). It is published twice a year, in June and December, by Elsevier.
The Journal accepts original investigations, comprehensive reviews, case studies and short communications on current topics in exercise science, physical fitness and physical education.