Increasing Children’s physical Activity by Policy (CAP) in preschools within the Stockholm region: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster‑randomized controlled trial
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
BMC
Materia
Physical activity Policy Intervention Cluster-randomized controlled trial Preschool Accelerometer-based measurement
Date
2022-07-19Referencia bibliográfica
Chen, C... [et al.]. Increasing Children’s physical Activity by Policy (CAP) in preschools within the Stockholm region: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster-randomized controlled trial. Trials 23, 577 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-022-06513-4]
Sponsorship
Karolinska Institutet; Health and Medical Care Administration (Halso-och sjukvardsforvaltningen, Region Stockholm); Swedish Research Council for Sport ScienceAbstract
Background: Systematic reviews suggest that preschool environmental/organizational changes may be effective
in increasing physical activity (PA) levels of preschool children, but evidence is scarce regarding feasible, effective,
and equitable interventions that can be scaled up. Specifically, it is essential to understand whether introducing a
multicomponent organizational change in terms of policy in the preschool context may be beneficial for children’s
PA levels and concomitant health outcomes. To bridge this knowledge gap, our main aim is to examine the feasibility
and effectiveness of a policy package in increasing PA levels in preschool children, using a large-scale pragmatic
cluster-randomized controlled trial.
Methods: This proposed study is a pragmatic cluster-randomized controlled trial with two conditions
(intervention and control with a 1:1 ratio) with preschools as clusters and the unit of randomization. We aim to
recruit approximately 4000 3–5-year-old children from 90 preschools and retain more than 2800 children from 85
preschools to provide adequate statistical power for the analyses. The intervention to implement is a co-created,
multicomponent policy package running for 6 months in preschools randomized to intervention. Change in
accelerometer measured PA levels in children between intervention and control from pre- and post-intervention will
be the primary outcome of the study, while secondary outcomes include health outcomes such as musculoskeletal
fitness, psychosocial functioning, and absence due to illness in children among others. Implementation will be
studied carefully using both quantitative (dose, fidelity) and qualitative (interview) methodologies. The change in
primary and secondary outcomes, from pre- to post-intervention, will be analyzed with linear mixed-effect models (to
allow both fixed and random effects) nested on a preschool level.
Discussion: This is a large-scale co-creation project involving the City of Stockholm, childcare stakeholders,
preschool staff, and the research group with the potential to influence more than 30,000 preschool children within
the Stockholm area. The study will add reliable evidence for the implementation of PA policies at the organizational
level of preschools and clarify its potential effect on objectively measured PA and health markers in children.