| Literature DB >> 20825660 |
Ruth G Jepson1, Fiona M Harris, Stephen Platt, Carol Tannahill.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several World Health Organisation reports over recent years have highlighted the high incidence of chronic diseases such as diabetes, coronary heart disease and cancer. Contributory factors include unhealthy diets, alcohol and tobacco use and sedentary lifestyles. This paper reports the findings of a review of reviews of behavioural change interventions to reduce unhealthy behaviours or promote healthy behaviours. We included six different health-related behaviours in the review: healthy eating, physical exercise, smoking, alcohol misuse, sexual risk taking (in young people) and illicit drug use. We excluded reviews which focussed on pharmacological treatments or those which required intensive treatments (e.g. for drug or alcohol dependency).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20825660 PMCID: PMC2944371 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-538
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Inclusion and exclusion criteria which applied across the six health behaviours
| 1. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses |
| 2. English language publications only |
| 3. Focus on public health, health promotion (or related research) or primary care led interventions which contained an educational and/or behavioural component |
| 4. Year of publication limited to 1995-2006 |
| 1. Reviews of health screening |
| 2. Reviews of psychiatric interventions as part of treatment of those with mental illness |
| 3. Reviews of interventions with only a clinical or pharmacological focus (e.g. reducing risk of heart disease, diet for diabetes care etc). |
| 4. Reviews of interventions carried out within secondary or tertiary care |
| 5. Reviews of drug interventions |
| 6. Review of interventions which did not contain a behavioural/educational component to the intervention |
| 7. Reviews of interventions which did not have the aim of changing any of the six health behaviours |
Inclusion/exclusion criteria for each of the six health behaviours
| Health Behaviour | Population | Intervention | Exclusions | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smokers | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; smoke free policies; other (to promote the outcomes) | Nicotine replacement therapy; other drug therapies; acupuncture; interventions aimed at treatment of smoking-related illness | Change in behaviours | |
| Those with raised risk (e.g. overweight, sedentary or pregnant) | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; other (to promote the outcomes) | Interventions aimed at treating health problems (e.g. arthritis, back pain and intermittent claudication) | Change in behaviours | |
| Problem drinkers | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; interventions to reduce drink driving; other (to promote the outcomes) | Programmes to maintain abstinence; reviews of those with alcohol dependence | Change in behaviours | |
| General population | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; | Interventions aiming only to reduce risk factors (blood pressure; hypertension); population with a chronic disease (e.g. those with diabetes or heart disease) | Change in behaviours | |
| General population | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; other (to promote the outcomes) | Interventions aimed at illicit drug misusers (i.e. those with a dependency on illicit drugs) | Change in behaviours | |
| Young people | Interventions with a behavioural or educational component; advertising/media campaign; other (to promote the outcomes) | Interventions aimed at sexual risk takers (e.g. treatments for STIs; pregnancy counselling) | Change in behaviours | |
Figure 1Quorum statement.
Criteria used to determine the potential for bias in the reviews
| Criteria which had to be met | ||
|---|---|---|
| Criteria | ++ | + |
| 1. Was there a focused aim or research question? | Yes | Yes |
| 2. Explicit inclusion/exclusion criteria | Yes | Yes |
| 3. More than 1 assessor/selector | Yes | |
| 4. Provide details of databases searched | Yes | Yes |
| 5. Lists years searched | Yes | Yes |
| 6. Followed up references in bibliographies | Yes | |
| 7. Experts consulted for further sources | ||
| 8. Grey literature included/searched | ||
| 9. Specified search terms/strategy | Yes | Yes |
| 10. Not restricted to English language papers only | Yes | |
| 11. Quality assessed | Yes | Yes |
| 12. Data supports conclusions | Yes | Yes |
Scoring by type of evidence included in the reviews
| Classification | Type of evidence |
|---|---|
| 1 | Systematic reviews of RCTs |
| 2 | Systematic reviews of individual, non-RCTs, case-control studies, cohort studies, controlled before-and-after (CBA), interrupted time series (ITS), correlation studies |
| 1&2 | Systematic reviews of |
Quality of the reviews by type of health behaviour
| Health | High quality | Well conducted | Reviews of | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of evidence* | 1 | 1&2 | 2 | 1 | 1&2 | 2 | 1 | 1&2 | 2 | |
| 8 | 3 | 0 | 14 | 10 | 1 | 6 | 3 | 3 | ||
| 5 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 3 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | ||
| 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 12 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | ||
| 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
| 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 3 | 0 | ||
Notes: columns are not totalled because some reviews were included in more than one health behaviour
*Study designs included within the systematic reviews: 1 = RCT; 2 = non-RCT; 1&2 = include both study designs.
** ++ = low potential; - = high potential
Summary of reviews for each of the health behaviours
| Health Behaviour | Total number | No. aimed at general population | No. aimed at community, school or work places | No. aimed at targeted populations or individuals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | 6 | Young people (11) | ||
| 4 | 1 | Young people (6) | ||
| 4 | 0 | Young people (2) | ||
| 0 | 3 | Young people (4) | ||
| 0 | 4 | 0 | ||
| 0 | 8 | 0 | ||
Notes: columns are not totalled because some reviews were included in more than one health behaviour
Some reviews included more than one population group, so the rows may not add up to the total number of reviews for each health behaviour
Research questions for future systematic reviews related to health inequalities
| 1. How does the effectiveness of interventions to effect positive changes in health behaviours vary according to the socio-economic, cultural or other characteristics of participants? This might include studies of effectiveness according to age, gender, ethnicity, social class and locality. |
| 2. What is the effectiveness of interventions which address the interconnectedness of negative health behaviours? For instance, this review might explore the effectiveness of combined smoking and alcohol reduction/cessation interventions. |
| 3. What is the demographic profile of those who gain access to interventions and how does this relate to existing knowledge on health inequalities? This review could explore the socio-economic characteristics of intervention participants to reveal the 'fit' between those groups most at risk from the ill effects of negative health behaviours and intervention participants. |
| 4. What are the challenges for recruitment of intervention participants? What are the most effective ways of recruiting 'hard to reach' groups, such as ethnic minorities and the socially and economically disadvantaged? |
| 5. What is the relationship between the outcomes of interventions and the social, cultural and demographic characteristics of participants? Questions to explore might include whether the intervention is equally effective with participants who differ with regard to gender, age, ethnicity, rural or urban location, and employment status. |
Research questions for future systematic reviews on the effectiveness of interventions for health behaviour change
| 1. What is the effectiveness of interventions which target tobacco use or smoking cessation/reduction in older people? |
| 2. What is the effectiveness of interventions which reduce or prevent alcohol misuse among older people? |
| 3. What is the effectiveness of interventions to promote healthy eating at the population level? These might include mass media (e.g. TV, newspaper, billboard advertising, leaflet and poster advertising/information) or policy related interventions. Policy might include changes to food labelling to promote healthy eating. |
| 4. What is the effectiveness of interventions targeting pregnant women to prevent illicit drug use? |
| 5. What is the effectiveness of population level interventions, such as policy or legislation change or the use of mass media, to prevent illicit drug misuse? Further reviews are required more generally in the area of illicit drug use among adults and older people. |
Research questions for future systematic reviews on the effectiveness of interventions for health behaviour change
| 6. What is the effectiveness of interventions which target tobacco use or smoking cessation/reduction in older people? |
| 7. What is the effectiveness of interventions which reduce or prevent alcohol misuse among older people? |
| 8. What is the effectiveness of interventions to promote healthy eating at the population level? These might include mass media (e.g. TV, newspaper, billboard advertising, leaflet and poster advertising/information) or policy related interventions. Policy might include changes to food labelling to promote healthy eating. |
| 9. What is the effectiveness of interventions targeting pregnant women to prevent illicit drug use? |
| 10. What is the effectiveness of population level interventions, such as policy or legislation change or the use of mass media, to prevent illicit drug misuse? Further reviews are required more generally in the area of illicit drug use among adults and older people. |