| Literature DB >> 28253904 |
Katherine L Downing1, Jo Salmon2, Trina Hinkley2, Jill A Hnatiuk3, Kylie D Hesketh2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sedentary behaviour (e.g. television viewing, sitting time) tracks over time and is associated with adverse health and developmental outcomes across the lifespan. Young children (5 years or younger) spend up to 12 h/day sedentary, of which around 2 h is spent in screen time (e.g. watching television). Interventions to reduce sedentary behaviour in early childhood report mixed results and many have limited potential for scalability. Mobile phones offer a wide-reaching, low-cost avenue for the delivery of health behaviour programmes to parents but their potential to reduce young children's sedentary behaviour has not been widely tested. This study aims to test the feasibility and efficacy of a parent-focused, predominantly mobile telephone-delivered intervention to support parents to minimise the amount of time their child spends using screens and in overall sitting time. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Early childhood; Randomised controlled trial; SMS; Screen time; Sedentary behaviour; Sitting time; Television viewing; Text messaging; mHealth
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28253904 PMCID: PMC5335778 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-1841-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Schedule of enrolment, interventions and assessments
Intervention strategies mapped to theoretical constructs
| Strategies | Theoretical constructs |
|---|---|
| Provide parents with evidence-based guidelines for sedentary behaviour | SCT: Knowledge |
| Provide parents with ideas for minimising sedentary behaviour (e.g. changing activities such as drawing or painting from sitting down to standing up, setting screen time rules, removing screens from bedrooms, leading by example) | SCT: Self-efficacy |
| Provide parents with alternatives to sedentary behaviour (e.g. new activities to try, providing practical ideas for entertaining children when cooking dinner) | SCT: Knowledge |
| Assist parents to set goals to reduce screen time and overall sitting time (e.g. to limit their child’s screen time to 30 min per day) | SCT: Goal setting |
| Educate parents about benefits of reducing sedentary behaviour and increasing active play (e.g. detrimental effects of screen time on sleep, benefits of active play on development) | SCT: Knowledge |
| Provide parents with a goal-checking magnet to monitor their progress with their goals | CALO-RE: Prompt self-monitoring of behaviour |
| Send weekly goal-check SMS | CALO-RE: Prompt review of behavioural goals |
| Provide parents with positive reinforcement and suggest rewards (e.g. an afternoon in the park with their child) when goals are met | CALO-RE: Prompt rewards contingent on effort or progress towards behaviour |
SCT social cognitive theory, SMS short message service
Fig. 2Trial flow diagram