1. Promoting men's health through sports clubs: a rapid realist review
- Author
-
Timm, A, Van Hoye, A, Sharp, P, Andersen, TH, Krustrup, P, Hansen, L, Corsten, KH, Iversen, PB, Rod, MH, Klinker, CD, Timm, A, Van Hoye, A, Sharp, P, Andersen, TH, Krustrup, P, Hansen, L, Corsten, KH, Iversen, PB, Rod, MH, and Klinker, CD
- Abstract
sec Background p Traditional health promotion interventions have failed to engage men Sports clubs offer male friendly health promotion settings for men but little is known about implementable intervention strategies and subsequent effects This rapid realist review RRR aims to identify context mechanisms and effects of health promotion interventions targeting men by or in collaboration with sports clubs p sec sec Methods p The RRR methodology was developed in collaboration with a panel of Danish practice and policy representatives and international academics A systematic literature search was conducted in February 2023 for studies published after 2013 in MEDLINE Embase and SportDiscus databases and through grey literature sources Included studies 1 targeted men aged 18 years 2 reported health promotion outcomes and 3 were delivered primarily by or in collaboration with sports clubs p sec sec Results p Fifty two studies were included Preliminary analyses indicate that interventions delivered through sports clubs show promise for engaging men with high cardiometabolic risk and producing favorable health outcomes Preliminary findings from the realist synthesis show that if men felt a strong attachment to the sports club context it resonated with their feelings of social identity which outweighed a former reluctance to attend health programs mechanism and thus increased the men s likelihood for program engagement and health behavior change outcome p sec sec Conclusions p Our study indicates that men s health promotion through sports clubs is emergent While great strides have been made to increase men s involvement in health promoting activities by delivering interventions through sports clubs research has predominantly focused on select behaviours e g physical activity sub groups e g sports fans and predominantly Caucasian overweight middle aged men p sec
- Published
- 2023