| Literature DB >> 28764754 |
Tuija Seppälä1, Nelli Hankonen2, Eveliina Korkiakangas3, Johanna Ruusuvuori2, Jaana Laitinen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Health policy papers disseminate recommendations and guidelines for the development and implementation of health promotion interventions. Such documents have rarely been investigated with regard to their assumed mechanisms of action for changing behaviour. The Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) and Behaviour Change Techniques (BCT) Taxonomy have been used to code behaviour change intervention descriptions, but to our knowledge such "retrofitting" of policy papers has not previously been reported. This study aims first to identify targets, mediators, and change strategies for physical activity (PA) and nutrition behaviour change in Finnish policy papers on workplace health promotion, and second to assess the suitability of the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW) approach for this purpose.Entities:
Keywords: Behaviour change techniques; Health promotion; Mechanisms of action; Nutrition; Physical activity; Policy papers; Sedentary behaviour; Workplace
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28764754 PMCID: PMC5540493 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-017-4574-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Selected primary and secondary policy papers and sources of technical terms
| Policy paper | Publisher | Year | Pages | Target |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Principles of good occupational healthcare practice guide | Ministry of Social Affairs and Health/Finnish Institute of Occupational Health | 2014 | 317 | OHC professionals |
| 2. National nutrition recommendations | National Nutrition Council | 2014 | 60 | Healthcare, catering and food industry professionals, authorities, and public health organizations |
| 3. Guidelines of the working group to monitor and develop mass catering services | Ministry of Social Affairs and Health | 2010 | 82 | Administration, private sector, social partners, NGOs |
| 4. National strategy for physical activity promoting health and well-being 2020 | Ministry of Social Affairs and Health | 2013 | 62 | National and local actors |
| 5. Action plan of the National Obesity Programme 2012–2015 | National Institute for Health and Well-being | 2013 | 59 | State and municipal administration, healthcare, early childhood education, education, sports department, technical and community planning, educational organizations, NGOs, defence forces, employers and trade unions, food industry, trade, restaurants and catering, media, research institutions |
| 6. National strategy for the reduction of sedentary behaviour | Ministry of Social Affairs and Health | 2015 | 44 | Children, adolescents, parents, instructors, teachers, day care, schools, municipalities, students, employees, study communities, work communities, aged, care services |
| Ref [ | Finnish Transport Agency | 2012 | 76 | State, municipal and private sector actors |
| Ref [ | Ministry of Social Affairs and Health | 2010 | 24 | Municipality management, ports department, social and health department, youth department, culture and library department, technical departments |
| 6. Tec 1. Clinical practice guidelines for physical activity | Finnish Medical Society Duodecim | 2016 | 27 | Healthcare professionals |
| 7. Tec 2. Clinical practice guideline for obesity care | Finnish Medical Society Duodecim | 2013 | 27 | Healthcare professionals |
| Tec 3. Physical activity prescription | UKK Institute | 2013 | 23 | Healthcare professionals |
Policy papers 1–6 are the primary papers investigated. Paper Ref [1] was referred to in paper 4, and paper Ref [2] was referred to in papers 4 and 5. The content of technical terms presented in policy papers was checked in the documents Tec 1, Tec 2, and Tec 3
Identified targets in policy recommendations
| Target | Examples | Total(%) | Nutr.(%) | PA(%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Individual |
| 57 (46) | 39 (50) | 46 (55) |
| Community |
| 13 (10) | 2 (3) | 12 (14) |
| Environment |
| 55 (44) | 37 (47) | 25 (30) |
| Total | 125 (100%) | 78 (100%) | 83 (100%) | |
Numbers are frequencies. Numbers in parentheses are percentages. Nutr. nutrition, PA physical activity. The total is smaller than the sum of Nutr. and PA because parts of the recommendations (i.e. focusing on outcomes or health behaviour in general) were double coded
Identified mechanisms of action recommended in health policy papers
| Mechanisms of action | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COM-B | N (%) | TDF | N (%) |
|
| Psychological capability | 34 (22) | Knowledge | 27 (14) |
|
| Skills | 12 (6) |
| ||
| MAD | 7 (4) |
| ||
| BR | 6 (3) |
| ||
| Physical capability | 2 (1) | Skills | 2 (1) |
|
| Physical opportunity | 47 (31) | Env. | 48 (25) |
|
| Social opportunity | 37 (24) | Social Influences | 38 (20) |
|
| Reflective motivation | 24 (16) | S/P id | 1 (1) |
|
| B Cap | 6 (3) |
| ||
| Optimism | 1 (1) |
| ||
| B Con | 17 (9) |
| ||
| Intentions | 8 (4) |
| ||
| Goals | 4 (2) |
| ||
| Automatic motivation | 10 (6) | S/P id | 1 (1) |
|
| Optimism | 0 (0) | - | ||
| Reinforcement | 9 (5) |
| ||
| Emotion | 2 (1) |
| ||
| Total | 154 (100%) | Total | 189 (100%) | |
Numbers are frequencies. Numbers in parentheses are percentages. TDF domain abbreviations: MAD memory, attention, and decision processes; BR behavioural regulation; Env. environmental context and resources; S/P id social/professional role and identity; B Cap beliefs about capability; B Con beliefs about consequences
Identified IFs and BCTs recommended in policy papers
| Intervention function N (%) | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Education 27 (23) | Persuasion 15 (13) | Incentivization 6 (5) | Coercion 2 (2) | Training 2 (2) | Restriction 5 (4) | Env. restructuring 34 (29) | Modelling 1 (1) | Enablement 24 (20) | Total 116 (100%) |
| BCTs | Examples | N (%) | |||||||
| Goal-setting (behaviour) |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Goal-setting (outcome) |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Action-planning |
| 2 (1) | |||||||
| Discrepancy between current behaviour and goal |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Behavioural contract |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Monitoring of behavioura |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Feedback on behaviour |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Self-monitoringa |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Self-monitoring of behaviour |
| 4 (2) | |||||||
| Social support (unspecified) |
| 18 (11) | |||||||
| Social support (emotional) |
| 4 (2) | |||||||
| Instructions on how to perform the behaviour |
| 20 (12) | |||||||
| Information about antecedents |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Information about health consequences |
| 11 (7) | |||||||
| Demonstration of the behaviour |
| 2 (1) | |||||||
| Prompts/cues |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Behavioural practice/rehearsal |
| 7 (4) | |||||||
| Behaviour substitution |
| 2 (1) | |||||||
| Habit formation |
| 5 (3) | |||||||
| Habit reversal |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Generalization of target behaviour |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Material incentive |
| 4 (2) | |||||||
| Social reward |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Reduce negative emotions |
| 3 (2) | |||||||
| Restructuring the physical environment |
| 38 (24) | |||||||
| Restructuring the social environment |
| 11 (7) | |||||||
| Avoidance of exposure to cues for the behaviour |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Adding objects to the environment |
| 4 (2) | |||||||
| Identification of self as role model |
| 2 (1) | |||||||
| Incompatible beliefs |
| 1 (1) | |||||||
| Verbal persuasion about capability |
| 2 (1) | |||||||
| Total number of observed BCTs | 163 (100%) | ||||||||
Numbers are frequencies. Numbers in parentheses are percentages. aMore general formulation than in BCT Taxonomy (v1)