| Literature DB >> 35627720 |
Léa Mekkaoui1, Christophe Schnitzler2, Michel Sidney1, Joseph Gandrieau1, Fabien Camporelli3, François Potdevin1.
Abstract
Children between the ages of 4-6 years represent the population most affected by drowning accidents, while their early involvement in physical activity, and more specifically in aquatic activities is a key factor in their future physical life journey. The systematic review's purpose was to identify aspects in the intervention's studies with children and/or their parents that had a significant impact on the Aquatic Literacy (AL) dimensions mentioned as motor, psychological, affective, and cognitive. The PICO method was used to define the research question and PRISMA checklist searched for articles in nine databases: Cochrane, Embase, ERIC, ProQuest, PsychInfo, PubMed, Scopus, SportDiscus, and Web of Science. Eligibility criteria were: (1) English language, (2) primary research, (3) population of 4-6 year old children or their parents, (4) intervention study design, and (5) results related to at least one of the AL domains. The strength of evidence and the risk of bias were assessed. Results showed relatively poor number of studies for such a vulnerable population regarding the drowning risk (n = 8 for parents and n = 14 for children intervention). Studies did not show a consensus on which educational approach was more beneficial than others. Concerning parental education, results were rather homogeneous, especially concerning the theoretical frameworks employed and the relevancy to include parents in swimming programs. The development of pedagogical tools for promotion and evaluation, based on the AL theoretical framework, could help to clarify the question of "how to teach" children to prevent drowning and engage young children in long-term physical activities.Entities:
Keywords: can swim; parental supervision; preschoolers; swimming intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35627720 PMCID: PMC9141389 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19106180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Flowchart of study selection process.
Study using intervention towards children and their parents.
| Authors, Year, Strength of Evidence [ | Objective | Theoretical Framework(s) | Population | Study Design | Measurement(s) | Main Outcomes by AL Domains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Invernizzi et al. (2021) | Measure the effects of non-linear (NLP) vs. linear pedagogy (LP) in aquatic skills learning, and perception of children and their parents towards improvements during the training | Physical literacy | Preliminary Interview on Swimming Course Perception [ Parent’s questionnaire about the swimming courses perception Aquatic motor competence’s test [ Pictorial scale of perceived motor competence [ |
in LP for all aquatic skills (excepted for water entry) in NLP for buoyancy, arm propulsion and recovery actions Higher perception of children’s technical improvement and children’s confidence in LP Higher perception of children’s enjoyment in NLP Higher satisfaction towards swimming lesson for NLP Higher enjoyment, self-competence in staying in deep water, and social relations for NLP |
Legend: F—Female; M–Male; NLP–Non-linear Pedagogy; LP–Linear Pedagogy.
Studies using intervention towards children.
| Authors, Year, Strength of Evidence [ | Objective | Theoretical Framework(s) | Population | Study Design | Measurement(s) | Main Outcomes by AL Domains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arhesa et al. | Determine the effect of a playful method in swimming skills | Developmental psychology [ | Play method can improve swimming skills of preschoolers Number of children per categories: Improvement of confidence to enter the water | |||
| Costa et al. (2012) | Analyse the differences between teaching methods in deep water (DW) & Shallow water (SW) for 4–5 years old for improving aquatic skills after 6, 12 and 18 months of practice | Aquatic motor development (Aquatic readiness, [ |
No significant difference in aquatic readiness between DW and SW programs Seems to impose greater water competence particularly after 6 months of practice on most aquatic motor skills assessed After 12 months of practice the level of achievement is still significant lower in several aquatic skills After 18 months of swimming practice, students have a higher number of aquatic skills acquired | |||
| Ramos et al. (2018) | Assess the effectiveness of a classroom-based water safety program in Vietnam | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework | Quang Binh, Central Vietnam |
Youth participants significantly increased their knowledge related to self-rescue and bystander rescue | ||
| Erbaugh (1986) | Investigate the effects of aquatic training on the swimming performance | Motor development |
Significant higher performances for G1 in comparison with G2 and G3 at each point in time for children’s performance of each category of tasks Aquatic training had a significant effect on the swimming performance of the G1 and group G2 | |||
| Barcala-Furelos et al. (2019) | Assess a pilot childhood education program focused on the understanding, learning and memorisation of measures preventing drownings | Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework |
Significant improvement for EG in swimming pool and beach knowledge (safety element, potential risks) | |||
| Bradley et al. (1996) | Measure performance change by 6 years old beginner swimmers participating in massed vs. distributed learning | Erbaugh [ |
Progress was similar for both groups despite the higher initial performance rating in the daily group Interval of 1 week between lessons is not detrimental to acquisition of swim strokes Front-crawl swimming skill increased significantly for both groups after the 3rd of 10 lessons No gender effect was detected | |||
| Olaisen et al. (2017) | To evaluate the effectiveness of a swim skill acquisition intervention | Health Belief Model [ | Latinos in Redwood City, USA |
Lesson number (more than age or gender) is the major contributing factor to the acquisition of aquatic skills A minimum of 10 lessons over 8 weeks is recommended to improve swimming skill acquisition Skills acquisition improvement was slightly high among girls | ||
| Lawson et al. (2012) | Evaluate the impact of a water safety curriculum on safety knowledge | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework | Urban youth summer camp |
More water safety knowledge, better ability to list safety rules after receiving the program Significantly more rules list at T1 than at T0 for 1st and 2nd grade Pre-kindergarten/kindergarten group did not score significantly higher on the retention test compared with the pretest | ||
| Rocha et al. (2018) | Determine the effect of deep vs. shallow water differences on developing preschoolers’ aquatic skills after 6 months of practice | Aquatic Motor Skills [ |
Improved several basic aquatic skills Higher degree of aquatic competence after a period of 6 months of practice Developed a less streamlined position at ventral gliding Association between enjoyment for swimming practice and trust about their own security in the new environment | |||
| Terzidis et al. (2007) | Explore whether an intervention during mandatory schooling can changes water safety knowledge and attitudes | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework | Greater Athens, Greece |
Improvements of attitude towards water safety and drowning prevention Improvements of attitude towards water safety and drowning prevention | ||
| Bunker et al. (1976) | Investigate the effect of video-taped FB on the learning of a continuous motor task | Cognitive development |
No significant improvements in flutter kicks performance Performed significantly better than the groups who received traditional instruction with auditory feedback | |||
| Diem (1982) | Assess the impact of early motor stimulation on the entire development of 4–6 years children | Psychological development [ | Cologne, Germany | Better movement quality and accuracy, balancing and reaction Increase in development toward independence and self-assurance Stronger development, better ability to cope with new and strange situation without the obvious effective Better concentration Increase their motivation performance Greater readiness for social contact, better integration in the peer group, react more cooly to disappointments inflicted on them by their peers Higher social behaviour | ||
| Solomon, et al. (2012) | Determine the effectiveness of the | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework | Grenada |
Increase water safety knowledge No significant effect |
Legend: F—Female; M–Male; CG–Control Group; EG–Experimental Group; DW–Deep Water; SW–Shallow Water; FB–Feedback.
Studies using intervention towards parents.
| Authors, Year, Strength of Evidence [ | Objective | Theoretical Framework(s) | Population | Study Design | Measurement(s) | Main Outcomes by AL Domains |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morrongiello et al. (2013) | To examine changes in parents’ beliefs about their children’s risk of drowning, their perceived ability to swim, and their need for supervision when swimming and compare the effect of regular feedback to parents on their children’s progress and the effect of a close call of drowning | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework |
Poor accuracy in judging children’s swimming abilities even though it improved from the beginning to the end of the swim lessons Supervision needs were underestimated and did not vary with program or change over the swim lessons Parents made more errors in judging their child’s swim ability at the T1 vs T2 Closer supervision Made more errors in judging their child’s swim ability than in the FB program More vigilance and endorsed more watchful and proximal supervision | |||
| Morrongiello et al. (2014) | Determine how children’s participation in swim lessons impacts parents’ appraisals of children’s drowning risk and need for supervision | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework |
Perceived improvements in swim ability produce the undesirable effect of parents becoming more confident that young children can keep themselves safe near water and predicted decreased ratings of children’s supervision needs near water | |||
| Quan et al. (2020) | Assess the effects of a drowning prevention campaign | PRECEDE-PROCEED | Vietnamese American Community in Seattle, USA |
Significantly more respondents had heard water safety advice in the previous year Significant increase in the use of lifeguarded open water site Increased community assets: availability of low-cost family swim lessons, free lessons at beaches, low-cost life jacket sales, life jacket loan kiosks in multiple languages, and more Asian, including Vietnamese, lifeguards | ||
| McCarrison et al. (2016) | Evaluate an evidence-based self- instructional program aimed at improving CPR knowledge and confidence | Video Self-Instruction |
Significant improvement regarding parental confidence in determining the need for CPR at T1 and T2 Significant improvement in knowledge at T1 and T2 | |||
| Matthews et al. (2017) | Examine the effectiveness of a public education program for improving child supervision levels by parents at public swimming pools | Drowning prevention and Transtheorical model of behaviour change | Melbourne, Australia |
No significant effect in parental attention, proximity, and preparedness Significant improvement in parental attention, proximity, and preparedness | ||
| Sandomierski et al. (2019) | Develop, implement, and evaluate a program targeting parents’ beliefs about children’s safety around water | Health Belief Model |
Closer supervision of their child around water Increased knowledge about children’s drowning risks and need for supervision Greater inaccuracy in their judgments related to children’s swim skill and drown-risk Greater optimism bias related to the perception that swim lessons reduce children’s need for supervision More risk in their beliefs related to supervision | |||
| Moran et al. (2007) | Design and evaluate a pilot parent education program to improve parents’ knowledge and attitudes about water safety | Public Health and Drowning Prevention without specific theoretical framework | Auckland, New Zealand |
Improvement in parental awareness and attitudes of toddler water safety after the program Increase in comprehension and awareness of the circumstances surrounding toddler drowning No significative improvement about knowledge of child CPR procedures |
Legend: F—Female; M–Male; CG–Control Group; EG–Experimental Group; FB–Feedback; CPR–Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation.
Figure 2Summary of the main outcomes by Aquatic Literacy domains [22,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62].
Figure 3Risk of bias assessment [22,43,44,45,46,47,48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55,56,57,58,59,60,61,62].