Use of behaviour change techniques in lifestyle change interventions for people with intellectual disabilities
Autor: | Craig Melville, Aly Waninge, Thessa I.M. Hilgenkamp, Else Havik, Mariël Willems |
---|---|
Přispěvatelé: | Healthy Ageing, Allied Health Care and Nursing, Participation and Health of Persons with Intellectual and Visual Disabilities, General Practice |
Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
030506 rehabilitation
lifestyle health promotion Applied psychology Population Psychological intervention 03 medical and health sciences Social support 0302 clinical medicine Behavior Therapy Intellectual Disability Intervention (counseling) Intellectual disability Developmental and Educational Psychology medicine Humans Healthy Lifestyle 030212 general & internal medicine education Exercise physiotherapy lifestyle interventions education.field_of_study Social change physical activities leefstijlinterventie gezonde leefstijlen medicine.disease mental disorders Clinical Psychology Health promotion geestelijk gehandicapten nutrition verstandelijk gehandicapten Scale (social sciences) voeding fysiotherapie sense organs Diet Healthy intellectual disabilities 0305 other medical science Psychology Clinical psychology |
Zdroj: | Health Issues SIRG 2017 Conference Research in Developmental Disabilities, 60, 256-268. Elsevier Inc. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 60, 256-268. Elsevier |
ISSN: | 0891-4222 |
Popis: | Background:\ud \ud People with intellectual disabilities (ID) experience more health problems and have different lifestyle change needs, compared with the general population.\ud \ud Aims:\ud \ud To improve lifestyle change interventions for people with ID, this review examined how behaviour change techniques (BCTs) were applied in interventions aimed at physical activity, nutrition or physical activity and nutrition, and described their quality.\ud \ud Methods and procedures:\ud \ud After a broad search and detailed selection process, 45 studies were included in the review. For coding BCTs, the CALO-RE taxonomy was used. To assess the quality of the interventions, the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) scale was used. Extracted data included general study characteristics and intervention characteristics.\ud \ud Outcomes and results:\ud \ud All interventions used BCTs, although theory-driven BCTs were rarely used. The most frequently used BCTs were ‘provide information on consequences of behaviour in general’ and ‘plan social support/social change’. Most studies were of low quality and a theoretical framework was often missing.\ud \ud Conclusion and implications:\ud \ud This review shows that BCTs are frequently applied in lifestyle change interventions. To further improve effectiveness, these lifestyle change interventions could benefit from using a theoretical framework, a detailed intervention description and an appropriate and reliable intervention design which is tailored to people with ID. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |