Adding effect sizes to a systematic review on interventions for promoting physical activity among European teenagers

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Abstract

This commentary adds effect sizes to the recently published systematic review by De Meester and colleagues and provides a more detailed insight into the effectiveness of interventions to promote physical activity among European teenagers. The main findings based on this evidence were: (1) school-based interventions generally lead to short term improvement in physical activity levels, but there were large differences between interventions with regard to effect sizes; (2) a multi-component approach (including environmental components) generally resulted in larger effect sizes, thereby providing evidence for the assumption that a multi-component approach should produce synergistic results; and (3) if an intervention aimed to affect more health behaviours besides physical activity, then the intervention appeared to be less effective in favour of physical activity. © 2010 Crutzen; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Crutzen, R. (2010, April 16). Adding effect sizes to a systematic review on interventions for promoting physical activity among European teenagers. International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity. https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-7-29

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