同伴主导的少女学校体育活动干预:可行性随机对照研究

S. Sebire, Kathryn Banfield, R. Campbell, Mark J Edwards, R. Kipping, B. Kadir, K. Garfield, J. Matthews, P. Blair, R. Lyons, W. Hollingworth, R. Jago
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引用次数: 5

摘要

女孩不如男孩活跃,很少有青春期女孩符合体育活动(PA)指南。同龄人对少女的观点和行为有重要影响,但许多涉及同龄人的PA干预措施使用的是可能无法利用同龄人群体力量的正式方法。更非正式的同伴主导的PA干预措施在近端同伴群体中发挥作用,可能有希望增加女孩的PA。为了研究同伴主导的青春期女孩体育活动干预(PLAN-A)的可行性、承诺证据和成本,这是一种同伴主导的PA干预措施。第一阶段包括形成性工作和在一所中学进行的试点研究。第二阶段是一项可行性研究,包括在六所中学进行的试点随机对照试验,包括过程和经济评估。南格洛斯特郡和威尔特郡的六所中学,从高于当地学生津贴中位数(即贫困程度更高)的学校招聘。8年级女孩(12-13岁)。八年级女孩提名了本年级其他可能有影响力的女孩(例如,她们尊敬的人,是好的倾听者);被提名最多的18%被邀请成为同行支持者(PS)。PS在两对PS培训师的带领下,在学校外连续参加了两天的培训(5周后还有一天的补充日),以增加他们对PA的了解,以及他们在友谊小组中推广PA的能力和信心。措施侧重于建立可行性和前景的证据:招募和留住8年级女孩和PS,数据提供率[随机分组前/8年级初(T0)、8年级末(T1)和9年级初(T2)收集的加速度计和问卷],干预可接受性,PS培训出勤率,干预成本,以及中等至剧烈PA(MVPA)在工作日分钟的臂间差异。进行了过程评估。招募了六所学校:四所PLAN-A(n = 269)和两个对照(n = 158)。总的来说,94.7%的八年级女孩参加了这项活动。共有55名PSs(占8年级女生的17-24%)接受了培训(出勤率91-100%)。五名女孩接受了PS培训。所有时间点的问卷数据提供率均超过92%。加速度计返回率> 在T0、T1和T2,分别有83%、71%和62%的参与者符合85%和佩戴时间标准。干预组的平均工作日MVPA在T1时(1.1分钟,95%CI–4.3至6.5分钟)没有差异,但在T2时(6.1分钟,95%CI 1.4至10.8分钟)有差异,有利于PLAN-A。干预措施的平均费用为每所学校2685英镑,或每名八年级女孩37英镑。过程评估确定了PS培训和同伴支持策略的良好忠诚度、参与度和享受度。PS需要更多关于如何开始对话的指导。T2时加速度计数据提供最低,这表明需要采取策略来提高合规性。以同伴为主导的非正式干预方法,如PLAN-A,有望成为向青春期女孩推广PA的一种手段。PLAN-A的最终随机对照试验是有必要的。当前对照试验ISRCTN12543546。该项目由国家卫生研究所公共卫生研究计划资助,并将在《公共卫生研究》上全文发表;第7卷第16期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。这项工作是在英国临床研究合作组织(UKCRC)公共卫生研究卓越中心公共卫生改善复杂干预措施开发和评估中心(DECIPHer)的支持下进行的。感谢英国心脏基金会、英国癌症研究所、经济和社会研究理事会、医学研究理事会、威尔士政府和韦尔科姆信托基金会在UKCRC赞助下提供的联合资助(MR/KO232331/1)。这项研究是与布里斯托尔随机试验合作组织(BRTC)合作设计和交付的,该组织是一个英国CRC注册的临床试验单位,获得了NIHR临床试验单位的支持资金。干预费用由南格洛斯特郡议会和威尔特郡议会共同出资。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A peer-led physical activity intervention in schools for adolescent girls: a feasibility RCT
Girls are less active than boys and few adolescent girls meet physical activity (PA) guidelines. Peers are an important influence on the views and behaviours of adolescent girls, yet many PA interventions involving peers use formal approaches that may not harness the power of peer groups. More informal peer-led PA interventions, which work within proximal peer groups, may hold promise for increasing girls’ PA. To examine the feasibility, evidence of promise and cost of the Peer-Led physical Activity iNtervention for Adolescent girls (PLAN-A), a peer-led PA intervention. Phase 1 comprised formative work and a pilot study conducted in one secondary school. Phase 2 was a feasibility study comprising a pilot randomised controlled trial in six secondary schools, including process and economic evaluations. Six secondary schools in South Gloucestershire and Wiltshire, recruited from schools above the median local Pupil Premium (i.e. more deprived). Year 8 girls (aged 12–13 years). Year 8 girls nominated other girls in their year who are likely to be influential (e.g. who they look up to, are good listeners); the 18% most nominated were invited to be peer supporters (PSs). PSs attended 2 consecutive days of training (plus a top-up day 5 weeks later) outside the school site, led by pairs of PS trainers, to increase their knowledge about PA and their capabilities and confidence to promote PA in their friendship group. Measures focused on establishing evidence for feasibility and promise: recruitment and retention of Year 8 girls and PSs, data provision rates [accelerometer and questionnaire collected pre randomisation/beginning of Year 8 (T0), end of Year 8 (T1) and beginning of Year 9 (T2)], intervention acceptability, PS training attendance, intervention cost, and the between-arm difference in weekday minutes of moderate to vigorous PA (MVPA). A process evaluation was conducted. Six schools were recruited: four PLAN-A (n = 269) and two control (n = 158). In total, 94.7% of Year 8 girls participated. A total of 55 (17–24% of Year 8 girls) PSs were trained (attendance rate 91–100%). Five girls were trained as PS trainers. Questionnaire data provision exceeded 92% at all time points. Accelerometer return rates were > 85% and wear-time criteria were met by 83%, 71% and 62% of participants at T0, T1 and T2, respectively. Mean weekday MVPA did not differ between intervention arms at T1 (1.1 minutes, 95% CI –4.3 to 6.5 minutes) but did at T2 (6.1 minutes, 95% CI 1.4 to 10.8 minutes), favouring PLAN-A. The mean cost of intervention delivery was £2685 per school or £37 per Year 8 girl. Process evaluation identified good fidelity, engagement and enjoyment of the PS training and peer-support strategies. PSs needed more guidance on how to start conversations. Accelerometer data provision was lowest at T2, suggesting a need for strategies to increase compliance. Informal peer-led intervention approaches, such as PLAN-A, hold promise as a means of promoting PA to adolescent girls. A definitive randomised controlled trial of PLAN-A is warranted. Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN12543546. This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 7, No. 16. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. The work was undertaken with the support of the Centre for the Development and Evaluation of Complex Interventions for Public Health Improvement (DECIPHer), a UK Clinical Research Collaboration (UKCRC) Public Health Research Centre of Excellence. Joint funding (MR/KO232331/1) from the British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, Economic and Social Research Council, Medical Research Council, the Welsh Government and the Wellcome Trust, under the auspices of the UKCRC, is gratefully acknowledged. This study was designed and delivered in collaboration with the Bristol Randomised Trials Collaboration (BRTC), a UK CRC-registered clinical trials unit in receipt of NIHR clinical trials unit support funding. The intervention costs were jointly funded by South Gloucestershire Council and Wiltshire Council.
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