Abstract

Introduction: Over 40 million deaths annually are due to noncommunicable diseases, 15 million of these are premature deaths and physical inactivity contributes an estimated 9% to this figure. Global responses have included the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Global Action Plan on Physical Activity (GAPPA). Both point to policy action on physical activity (PA) to address change, yet the impact of policy on PA outcomes is unknown. The protocol described outlines the methodology for systematic literature reviews that will be undertaken by the Policy Evaluation Network (PEN) to address this knowledge gap. Methods: The seven best investments for promotion of population PA identified in the Toronto Charter highlighted seven policy domains (schools, transport, urban design, primary health care systems, public education, community-wide programmes and sport) which will form the basis of these PEN reviews. Seven individual scientific literature searches across six electronic databases will be conducted. Each will use the key concepts of policy, PA, evaluation and a distinct concept for each of the seven policy domains. This will be supplemented with a search of the reference list of included articles. Methodological quality will be assessed and overall effectiveness for each included study will be described according to pre-determined criteria. Conclusions: Each review will provide policy makers with a list of policy statements and corresponding actions which the evidence has determined impact on PA directly or indirectly. By collating the evidence, and demonstrating the depth of the science base which informs these policy recommendations, each review will provide guidance to policymakers to use evidence-based or evidence-informed policies to achieve the 15% relative reduction in physical inactivity as defined by GAPPA. Registration: PROSPERO CRD42020156630 (10/07/2020).

Highlights

  • Over 40 million deaths annually are due to noncommunicable diseases, 15 million of these are premature deaths and physical inactivity contributes an estimated 9% to this figure

  • The seven best investments for promotion of population physical activity (PA) identified in the Toronto Charter highlighted seven policy domains which will form the basis of these Policy Evaluation Network (PEN) reviews

  • Each review is designed to determine the impact of policy, either directly or indirectly, on physical activity outcomes across the different policy domains identified in the “Seven Best Investments” (ISPAH, 2012)

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Summary

29 Mar 2021 version 2 report report report report

Each review is designed to determine the impact of policy, either directly or indirectly, on physical activity outcomes across the different policy domains identified in the “Seven Best Investments” (ISPAH, 2012) These policy domains are wholeof-school programmes, transport policies and systems, urban design regulations and infrastructure, primary health care, public education, community-wide programmes involving multiple settings and sport systems and programmes that promote ‘sport for all’. These reviews will provide evidence supporting the development of a tool named the Physical Activity Environment Policy Index (PA EPI), based on similar principles to an existing tool called the Food Environment Policy Index (Food EPI) (Swinburn et al, 2013). Study status The submission of the first of seven intended reviews is being finalised, this focuses on the school setting A further three reviews are underway, these will focus on transport, public education and sport policy domains

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