1996 - 2006年澳大利亚体育活动政策的兴衰:在国际背景下的国家审查。

Bill Bellew, Stephanie Schöeppe, Fiona C Bull, Adrian Bauman
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引用次数: 58

摘要

背景:本文提供了自1996年美国外科医生关于身体活动与健康的报告发布以来的十年中澳大利亚身体活动政策发展的历史回顾,包括2004年世卫组织饮食、身体活动与健康全球战略。利用我们对“硬连线”政策标准的定义,将澳大利亚的这篇综述与已制定国家体育活动政策和战略的国家(新西兰、加拿大、巴西、苏格兰、瑞士、荷兰和芬兰)的国际视角进行了比较。方法包括文献和政策审查,审计相关网站,文件搜索和国际利益相关者的调查。结果:所有这些选定的国家都采取了多战略政策,并通过全国调查进行了身体活动监测。很少有人致力于三年以上的政策,也没有人系统地评价国家政策的执行情况。这份澳大利亚审查报告强调了体育活动相关政策的创新和领导阶段,以及停滞和衰退时期;早期的努力是世界上最好的,但到本审查的中期(2000年),为制定国家部门间政策框架而进行的有希望的尝试因联邦体育和娱乐部门的改革而受挫。在此期间,对体育活动和公共卫生方面良好做法的证据进行了几次广受好评的审查,但在执行所指出的政策和方案方面缺乏领导和资源。最近,广泛宣传以及公众和政界对慢性疾病预防(特别是肥胖和2型糖尿病)的极大关注主导了澳大利亚政策审议的框架。最后,为卫生部门制定了国家体育活动政策框架,但这不是一项包括教育、交通、城市规划以及体育和娱乐等其他重要部门的政策愿景。结论:尽管自1995/6年以来的十年中体育活动政策取得了一些进展,但本综述发现澳大利亚和其他地方的政策发展不一致。可以说,澳大利亚所做的并不比其他国家差,但是,只有在充分了解有效性证据和良好做法的基础上建立可持续的多部门公共卫生政策伙伴关系,才能更有效地应对人口缺乏身体活动的问题。在澳大利亚和其他地方,成功的先决条件是政治支持、长期投资和对项目实施和评估的承诺。当务之急是媒体和政治宣传注重这些因素的身体活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The rise and fall of Australian physical activity policy 1996 - 2006: a national review framed in an international context.

Background: This paper provides an historical review of physical activity policy development in Australia for a period spanning a decade since the release of the US Surgeon General's Report on Physical Activity and Health in 1996 and including the 2004 WHO Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health. Using our definition of 'HARDWIRED' policy criteria, this Australian review is compared with an international perspective of countries with established national physical activity policies and strategies (New Zealand, Canada, Brazil, Scotland, Switzerland, the Netherlands and Finland). Methods comprised a literature and policy review, audit of relevant web sites, document searches and surveys of international stakeholders.

Results: All these selected countries embraced multi-strategic policies and undertook monitoring of physical activity through national surveys. Few committed to policy of more than three years duration and none undertook systematic evaluation of national policy implementation. This Australian review highlights phases of innovation and leadership in physical activity-related policy, as well as periods of stagnation and decline; early efforts were amongst the best in the world but by the mid-point of this review (the year 2000), promising attempts towards development of a national intersectoral policy framework were thwarted by reforms in the Federal Sport and Recreation sector. Several well received reviews of evidence on good practices in physical activity and public health were produced in the period but leadership and resources were lacking to implement the policies and programs indicated. Latterly, widespread publicity and greatly increased public and political interest in chronic disease prevention, (especially in obesity and type 2 diabetes) have dominated the framework within which Australian policy deliberations have occurred. Finally, a national physical activity policy framework for the Health sector emerged, but not as a policy vision that was inclusive of the other essential sectors such as Education, Transport, Urban Planning as well as Sport and Recreation.

Conclusion: Despite some progression of physical activity policy in the decade since 1995/6, this review found inconsistent policy development, both in Australia and elsewhere. Arguably, Australia has done no worse than other countries, but more effective responses to physical inactivity in populations can be built only on sustainable multi-sectoral public health policy partnerships that are well informed by evidence of effectiveness and good practice. In Australia and elsewhere prerequisites for success are political support, long-term investment and commitment to program implementation and evaluation. An urgent priority is media and political advocacy for physical activity focussed on these factors.

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