| Literature DB >> 34401692 |
Shikha Saxena1,2, Jamie Millage1, Derek Wong1,3, Li-Ann Yap4, Lorene Bodiam5, Archie Allison6, Brian W McCrindle4, Patricia E Longmuir1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children with complex heart problems may be at higher risk for sedentary lifestyle morbidities than their healthy peers. This project examined perceptions, barriers, and supports that influence healthy active lifestyles among children with complex heart problems and their caregivers, to enable effective health and quality-of-life interventions.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34401692 PMCID: PMC8347848 DOI: 10.1016/j.cjco.2021.01.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CJC Open ISSN: 2589-790X
Recruitment criteria for participants
| Participants | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Children with complex heart problems | Have a heart condition requiring ongoing follow-up |
| Be able to verbally answer questions and express opinions in English | |
| Be between 4 and 17 years of age | |
| Be able to provide informed consent or assent to participate | |
| Parents | Have a child with a heart condition requiring ongoing follow-up |
| Be able to provide informed consent to participate | |
| Be able to verbally answer questions and express opinions in English | |
| Healthcare professionals | Have professional experience working with children with heart problems requiring ongoing care, as a physician, nurse, dietician, social worker, or other healthcare professional |
| Be able to provide informed consent to participate | |
| Be able to verbally answer questions and express opinions in English | |
| Recreation professionals | Have professional experience working with children in a community physical activity, recreation, or sport setting |
| Be able to provide informed consent to participate | |
| Be able to verbally answer questions and express opinions in English |
Question guide for focus groups and interviews
| Categories | Questions for parents | Questions for children | Questions for healthcare professionals | Questions for recreational professionals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meanings of healthy active lifestyle | What does a healthy lifestyle mean for your child? | What do you like to do when you’re being physically active? | What does a healthy lifestyle for your patient mean to you? | How would you describe a successful physical activity opportunity for children? |
| Supports, resources, barriers to engage in a healthy active lifestyle | What people, resources, or activities have improved/decreased your child’s physical activity and ability to engage in a healthy lifestyle? be physically active, eat a healthier diet, or reduce the risk of injury during physical activity? | Can you tell me about the people or things or reasons that make it easier for you to be physically active? | What people, resources, or activities have improved/decreased your patient’s ability to be physically active and engage in a healthy lifestyle? | What helps children to be physically active and engage in a healthy lifestyle? |
| Concerns about engaging in physical activity | What concerns do you hear from others about your child engaging in physical activity? | Some kids say that it’s hard for them to participate in physical activity. Can you think of what might make it hard for you or other kids your age? | What concerns about physical activity do you hear from your patients and their parents? | What concerns about including children with heart defects in physical activity do you hear from parents, your colleagues, or other participants? |
| Changes that could help or resources required to promote healthy active lifestyles | If you could change or add to the supports/resources/ services that you/your child received, how would they have been different in relation to: being physically active, eating a healthier diet, or reducing the risk of injury during physical activity?What supports/ resources/services do you think you/your child will need in the future so that your child can: be physically active, eat a healthier diet, or reduce the risk of injury during physical activity? | What could your family do to help you be more active or eat healthier? | What supports or services would benefit you or would you like to have to better enable your patients to: be physically active, adopt a healthier diet, reduce their physical activity injury risk? | What supports or resources do you know about that you think would help a child with a complex heart problem to successfully: engage in physical activity, eat healthier, reduce the risk of physical activity–related injuries? |
| Advice to other groups | What advice would you give to health professionals who care for your child regarding how they can help to encourage a healthy lifestyle and physical activity for your child? | If you could talk to your friends and family about physical activity and healthy eating, what would you want them to know? | What advice would you give to parents, other health professionals, and recreational professionals who care for your patient in regards to enabling a healthy lifestyle? | What advice would you give to parents or health professionals about how to get their child involved in community recreation opportunities? |
Child participant demographics
| Child ID # | Age (y) | Sex | Diagnoses |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | 17 | Female | Fontan single ventricle |
| 6 | 8 | Male | Not disclosed |
| 17 | 10 | Female | Hypoplastic left heart syndrome, post-Fontan |
| 20 | 10 | Female | Transposition of great arteries, arterial switch, aortic regurgitation |
| 21 | 9 | Male | Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia |
| 22 | 17 | Female | Partial anomalous pulmonary venous connection, ectopic atrial rhythm |
| 25 | 6 | Male | Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia |
| 26 | 14 | Male | Bilateral pulmonary artery stenosis, aortic stenosis, ventricular septal defect, pacemaker |
| 27 | 9 | Female | Prolonged cardiac repolarization |
| 28 | 7 | Male | Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia |
| 32 | 11 | Male | Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, mitral and aortic regurgitation |
ID, identification.
Figure 1Thematic schema outlining the roles and coordination among different caregivers to promote a healthy active lifestyle among children with complex heart problems. CHP, complex heart problems; HL, healthy living.