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Scaling-up evidence-based obesity interventions: A systematic review assessing intervention adaptations and effectiveness and quantifying the scale-up penalty

期刊

OBESITY REVIEWS
卷 20, 期 7, 页码 964-982

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/obr.12845

关键词

adaptation; obesity; scale-up; systematic review

资金

  1. Australian Research Council [DE170100382]
  2. Heart Foundation [101175]
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council [APP1128348]
  4. NHMRC TRIP Fellowship
  5. Australian Research Council [DE170100382] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Maximizing the benefits of investments in obesity research requires effective interventions to be adopted and disseminated broadly across populations (scaled-up). However, interventions often need considerable adaptation to enable implementation at scale, a process that can reduce the effects of interventions. A systematic review was undertaken for trials that sought to deliver an obesity intervention to populations on a larger scale than a preceding randomized controlled trial (RCT) that established its efficacy. Ten scaled-up obesity interventions (six prevention and four treatment) were included. All trials made adaptations to interventions as part of the scale-up process, with mode of delivery adaptations being most common. A meta-analysis of body mass index (BMI)/BMI z score (zBMI) from three prevention RCTs found no significant benefit of scaled-up interventions relative to control (standardized mean difference [SMD] = 0.03; 95% CI, -0.09 to 0.15, P = 0.639 - I-2 = 0.0%). All four treatment interventions reported significant improvement on all measures of weight status. Pooled BMI/zBMI data from prevention trials found significantly lower effects among scaled-up intervention trials than those reported in pre-scale-up efficacy trials (SMD = -0.11; 95% CI, -0.20 to -0.02, P = 0.018 - I-2 = 0.0%). Across measures of weight status, physical activity/sedentary behaviour, and nutrition, the effects reported in scaled-up interventions were typically 75% or less of the effects reported in pre-scale-up efficacy trials. The findings underscore the challenge of scaling-up obesity interventions.

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