Family-based eHealth interventions to reduce cardiovascular disease risk: a systematic review

Research output: Contribution to conferencePosterpeer-review

Abstract

Background
Family-based eHealth interventions have potential to reduce cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk and improve health of parents and children.

Purpose
To evaluate the effectiveness of family-based eHealth interventions to reduce parent and child CVD risk.

Methods
Systematic review. Five electronic databases were searched (CENTRAL; MEDLINE; CINAHL; EMBASE; PsycINFO) up to April 2020. Data extraction included: study design, setting, methodology, eHealth technology, experiment/control group constituents, risk factors, outcomes, incentivisation and limitations. Data were synthesised narratively. Cochrane methodology was used to assess risk of bias and reporting quality.

Results
In total, 2193 articles were screened and seven trials included for review. The most consistently improved CVD risk factor across parents and children was reduced alcohol use, whilst reduction in BMI the least consistently improved. Behaviour-change theoretical underpinning, extended follow-up duration, interactivity and incentivisation were identified as effective components of these interventions. Four studies were assessed as overall ‘low risk’ of bias and three studies had concerns with randomisation and intention-to-treat analysis.

Conclusions: This is the first systematic review to evaluate family-based eHealth interventions to reduce CVD risk. Despite a paucity in high-quality trials, there is evidence of their potential effectiveness. Recommended, more high quality, behaviour-change-theory-based, clearly reported interventions with explicit outcomes.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusAccepted - 18 Jun 2021
Event
EuroHeartCare 2021: ACNAP Congress 2021
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Duration: 18 Jun 202129 Jun 2021

Conference

Conference
EuroHeartCare 2021: ACNAP Congress 2021
Period18/06/202129/06/2021

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