Cargando…

O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card

PURPOSE: The benefits of physical activity (PA) are well established for children and adolescents, and national policies can play an important role in increasing child and adolescent PA. As part of the Active Healthy Kids Global Alliance initiative, the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tomaz, Simone A, Reilly, John J, Johnstone, Avril, Hughes, Adrienne, Robertson, Jenni, Craig, Leone C A, Bardid, Farid
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10493999/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.224
_version_ 1785104592676061184
author Tomaz, Simone A
Reilly, John J
Johnstone, Avril
Hughes, Adrienne
Robertson, Jenni
Craig, Leone C A
Bardid, Farid
author_facet Tomaz, Simone A
Reilly, John J
Johnstone, Avril
Hughes, Adrienne
Robertson, Jenni
Craig, Leone C A
Bardid, Farid
author_sort Tomaz, Simone A
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The benefits of physical activity (PA) are well established for children and adolescents, and national policies can play an important role in increasing child and adolescent PA. As part of the Active Healthy Kids Global Alliance initiative, the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card summarised the status of PA and health in Scottish children and adolescents prior to the COVID-19 pandemic—reporting on a range of indicators (Bardid et al., 2022). This study provides a detailed examination of the evidence informing the Government and Policy indicator. METHODS: Current Scottish PA policy documents (n = 18) published in 2011-2020—not including responses to COVID-19—were reviewed for grading. The grade was determined using an adapted version of the Policy Audit Tool version 2 (Ward et al., 2021). Key criteria in the scoring rubric include number and breadth of policies, identified funding, identifiable reporting structures, and monitoring and evaluation plan. RESULTS: A C- grade was assigned to the Government and Policy indicator. There is clear evidence of leadership and commitment to increasing levels of PA and providing PA opportunities for children and adolescents. The allocation of funds and resources for implementation of policy has increased substantially since the publication of previous report cards. Progress through the key stages of public policymaking—policy agenda and formation—has improved. However, some policy documents do not identify accountable organisations, whilst others do not include details regarding reporting structures. Moreover, many policy documents do not provide information on monitoring and evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: Scotland has many creditable policies at national level. There appears to be good links between government directorates, policies and organisations responsible for implementation. Child and adolescent PA is clearly a priority in Scotland; it is not only an outcome, but also a means to achieve other goals (e.g., active travel to take climate action). However, current policies provide limited information on how delivery of proposed actions will be monitored and evaluated in practice. Future policies should therefore include more information on monitoring, evaluation, and reporting of delivery of actions, in order to better understand and support policy implementation and its impact on PA in children and adolescents.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10493999
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104939992023-09-12 O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card Tomaz, Simone A Reilly, John J Johnstone, Avril Hughes, Adrienne Robertson, Jenni Craig, Leone C A Bardid, Farid Eur J Public Health Parallel sessions PURPOSE: The benefits of physical activity (PA) are well established for children and adolescents, and national policies can play an important role in increasing child and adolescent PA. As part of the Active Healthy Kids Global Alliance initiative, the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card summarised the status of PA and health in Scottish children and adolescents prior to the COVID-19 pandemic—reporting on a range of indicators (Bardid et al., 2022). This study provides a detailed examination of the evidence informing the Government and Policy indicator. METHODS: Current Scottish PA policy documents (n = 18) published in 2011-2020—not including responses to COVID-19—were reviewed for grading. The grade was determined using an adapted version of the Policy Audit Tool version 2 (Ward et al., 2021). Key criteria in the scoring rubric include number and breadth of policies, identified funding, identifiable reporting structures, and monitoring and evaluation plan. RESULTS: A C- grade was assigned to the Government and Policy indicator. There is clear evidence of leadership and commitment to increasing levels of PA and providing PA opportunities for children and adolescents. The allocation of funds and resources for implementation of policy has increased substantially since the publication of previous report cards. Progress through the key stages of public policymaking—policy agenda and formation—has improved. However, some policy documents do not identify accountable organisations, whilst others do not include details regarding reporting structures. Moreover, many policy documents do not provide information on monitoring and evaluation. CONCLUSIONS: Scotland has many creditable policies at national level. There appears to be good links between government directorates, policies and organisations responsible for implementation. Child and adolescent PA is clearly a priority in Scotland; it is not only an outcome, but also a means to achieve other goals (e.g., active travel to take climate action). However, current policies provide limited information on how delivery of proposed actions will be monitored and evaluated in practice. Future policies should therefore include more information on monitoring, evaluation, and reporting of delivery of actions, in order to better understand and support policy implementation and its impact on PA in children and adolescents. Oxford University Press 2023-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10493999/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.224 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Public Health Association. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Parallel sessions
Tomaz, Simone A
Reilly, John J
Johnstone, Avril
Hughes, Adrienne
Robertson, Jenni
Craig, Leone C A
Bardid, Farid
O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title_full O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title_fullStr O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title_full_unstemmed O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title_short O.4.6-5 Evaluation of physical activity policies in Scotland: results from the 2021 Active Healthy Kids Scotland Report Card
title_sort o.4.6-5 evaluation of physical activity policies in scotland: results from the 2021 active healthy kids scotland report card
topic Parallel sessions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10493999/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckad133.224
work_keys_str_mv AT tomazsimonea o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT reillyjohnj o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT johnstoneavril o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT hughesadrienne o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT robertsonjenni o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT craigleoneca o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard
AT bardidfarid o465evaluationofphysicalactivitypoliciesinscotlandresultsfromthe2021activehealthykidsscotlandreportcard