The impact of mass-media campaigns on physical activity: a review of reviews through a policy lens

Author:

den Braver Nicolette R12,Garcia Bengoechea Enrique34,Messing Sven5,Kelly Liam3,Schoonmade Linda J6,Volf Kevin3,Zukowska Joanna7,Gelius Peter5,Forberger Sarah8,Woods Catherine B3,Lakerveld J12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology and Data Science, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institutes, Amsterdam University Medical Centres , Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Upstream Team , Amsterdam, The Netherlands

3. Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Physical Activity for Health Research Cluster, Health Research Institute, University of Limerick , Limerick, Ireland

4. Research and Innovation Unit , Sport Ireland, Ireland

5. Department of Sport Science and Sport, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg , Erlangen, Germany

6. Medical Library, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam , Amsterdam, The Netherlands

7. Faculty of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Gdansk University of Technology , Gdansk, Poland

8. Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research and Epidemiology—BIPS , Bremen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Background This review of reviews aimed to: (1) summarize the evidence from published reviews on the effectiveness of mass-media campaigns to promote physical activity (PA) or PA-related determinants (intermediate psychological and proximal outcomes) and (2) to identify policy-relevant recommendations related to successful PA campaigns. Methods An extensive literature search was performed on 1 March 2021. Reviews that evaluated the impact of campaigns on distal (e.g. PA) and/or proximal outcomes of PA (awareness, knowledge, etc.) and that targeted the general population or subsets were included. Quality of reviews was assessed using the AMSTAR-2 tool. Policy-relevant recommendations were systematically derived and synthesized and formulated as good practice statements. A protocol was registered beforehand (ID: CRD42021249184). Results A total of 1915 studies were identified, of which 22 reviews were included. The most consistent evidence was found for the effectiveness of mass-media campaigns on proximal outcomes, while the evidence for distal outcomes was mixed. Good practice statements were derived: (1) to achieve behaviour change, mass-media is an important component of larger, multilevel and multicomponent strategies; (2) mass-media strategies should be coordinated and aligned at local- and national-level and be sustained, monitored and resourced at these levels and (3) media should be tailored to reduce socioeconomic inequalities. Conclusions Mass-media can play an important role in the promotion of PA. In general, evidence was more inconsistent for effectiveness on distal outcomes than for proximal outcomes. Policy-relevant recommendations include that mass-media strategies should be resourced, coordinated, aligned, sustained, monitored and evaluated on the local and national level.

Funder

Joint Programming Initiative

A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life

Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Health Research Board

The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development

The University of Auckland, School of Population Health

The National Centre for Research and Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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