Evaluating the effectiveness of the Play Active policy intervention and implementation support in early childhood education and care: a pragmatic cluster randomised trial protocol

Andrea Nathan*, Emma Adams, Stewart Trost, Donna Cross, Jasper Schipperijn, Matthew McLaughlin, Ashleigh Thornton, Georgina Trapp, Leanne Lester, Phoebe George, Elizabeth Wenden, Hayley Christian

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

Background: Daily physical activity is critical during the early years of life for facilitating children’s health and development. A large proportion of preschool children do not achieve the recommended 3 h of daily physical activity. Early childhood education and care (ECEC) services are a key setting to intervene to increase physical activity. There is a significant need for ECEC specific physical activity policy, including clearer guidelines on the amount of physical activity children should do during care, and strategies for implementation of these guidelines. Methods: This study is a pragmatic cluster randomised trial to evaluate the effectiveness of the Play Active physical activity policy intervention to improve early childhood education and care educator’s physical activity-related practices. The central component of Play Active is an evidence-informed physical activity policy template which includes 25 practices to support nine age-specific recommendations on the amount of physical activity and sedentary time, including screen time, young children should do while in care. There are six implementation support strategies to facilitate physical activity policy implementation: (i) personalise policy (services select at least five of the 25 practices to focus on initially); (ii) policy review and approval; (iii) a resource guide; (iv) a brief assessment tool for monitoring children’s energetic play; (v) professional development; and (vi) Project Officer implementation support (phone calls). A total of 60 early childhood education and care services will be recruited from metropolitan Perth, Western Australia. After baseline assessment, services will be randomly allocated to either intervention or wait-listed comparison conditions. Primary (educator-reported frequency and amount of daily time provided for children’s physical activity, sedentary and screen time) and secondary (educator physical activity-related practices, self-efficacy, motivation, attitudes and beliefs, social support, and supportive physical environment) outcomes will be assessed at baseline and post-intervention, after intervention services have had a minimum 3 months of policy implementation within their service. Discussion: The Play Active trial will rigorously evaluate a novel physical activity policy intervention with implementation support that promotes positive physical activity behaviours in educators and children attending ECEC. If effective, the program could be adapted, scaled-up and delivered in ECEC services nationally. Trial registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12620001206910 (date of registration 13/11/2020).

Original languageEnglish
Article number306
JournalBMC Public Health
Volume22
Number of pages12
ISSN1471-2458
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 14. Feb 2022

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work is supported by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) partnership project grant (#APP1152086) and partially through the Australian Research Council’s Centre of Excellence for Children and Families over the Life Course (#CE200100025). HC is supported by a National Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellowship (#102549). GT is supported by an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellowship (#DE210101791). DC is supported by a NHMRC Research Fellowship (#GNT1119339). EW is supported by an Australian Research Training Program Scholarship. The funding bodies had no role in the design of the study and collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript.

Funding Information:
Grant investigators (Hayley Christian, Stewart Trost, Michael Rosenberg, Donna Cross, Trevor Shilton, Jasper Schipperijn, Leanne Lester, Georgina Trapp, Ashleigh Thornton, Clover Maitland), partner organisations (Goodstart Early Learning, Minderoo Foundation, CoLab for Kids, Nature Play Australia, Cancer Council Western Australia, Australian Childcare Alliance, Western Australia?s Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries and Western Australia?s Department of Health) and PLAYCE research team members (Kanita Kunaratnam, Lauren Preedy, Alice Wrobel, Ivana Matic Girard, Anna Bird, Michelle Ng, Pulan Bai, Zino Phiri, Narelle Mullan) are all gratefully acknowledged. This was a joint initiative between the Telethon Kids Institute, University of Western Australia, Queensland University of Technology, University of Southern Denmark, Goodstart Early Learning, Minderoo Foundation-CoLab for Kids, Nature Play Australia, Cancer Council Western Australia (WA), Australian Childcare Alliance, WA Department of Local Government, Sport and Cultural Industries and WA Department of Health.

Keywords

  • Childcare
  • Childhood
  • Implementation
  • Intervention
  • Physical activity
  • Policy
  • Screen time
  • Sedentary

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