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find Keyword "Children and adolescent" 3 results
  • Influencing Factors Related to Sun Protection in Children and Adolescents: A Systematic Review

    ObjectiveTo analyze research status of influencing factors related to sun-protection problems in children and adolescents, and systematically review the influencing factors. MethodsWe electronically searched the following databases including The Cochrane Library, PubMed, Web of Knowledge, Ovid, EBSCO, EMbase, CBM, CNKI, VIP and WanFang Data to collect cross-sectional studies on sun-protection problems in children and adolescents up to December 2012. The criteria for cross-sectional studies recommended by AHQR was applied in the assessment of included studies. Then, qualitative analysis methods were used to systematically summarize information and results of the included studies. ResultsA total of 10 studies were included. The results showed that, the influencing factors of sun-protection behaviour in children and adolescents included gender, age, skin colour, eye colour, the mass media information, school health education, etc., of which, researches on gender, grade, light skin, eye colour were relatively more. ConclusionAt present, there are many studies about influencing factors related to sun-protection problems in children and adolescents while the target influencing factors differ in regions.

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  • Intervention effects of multiple exercise methods on depression and anxiety in children and adolescents: a network meta-analysis

    ObjectiveTo compare the effects of aerobic exercise, resistance exercise, aerobic combined with resistance exercise, routine nursing and no intervention on depression and anxiety in adolescents by means of network meta-analysis. MethodsA computer search was conducted in CNKI, WanFang Data, VIP, CBM, Web of Science, EBSCO, PubMed, Cochrane Library and Embase to collect randomized controlled trials (RCTs) related to exercise intervention for depression and anxiety in children and adolescents from inception to April 2023. After two researchers independently screened the literature, extracted data and evaluated the methodological quality of the included studies, Stata 14.0 and RevMan 5.3 software were used for statistical analysis. ResultsFinally 27 RCTs were included, covering 3 210 children and adolescents. The results of the network meta-analysis showed that in terms of improving depression, resistance exercise (SMD=−0.37, 95%CI −0.64 to −0.10, P<0.05) and aerobic exercise (SMD=−0.19, 95%CI −0.34 to −0.04, P<0.01) were significantly better than the no intervention group; in relieving anxiety, aerobic exercise (SMD=−0.29, 95%CI −0.54 to −0.03, P<0.05) was significantly better than the no intervention group. In improving self-worth, aerobic combined with resistance exercise (SMD=0.26, 95%CI 0.01 to 0.52, P<0.05) was statistically different from the no intervention group. The results of SUCRA probability sequence showed that in reducing depression, resistance exercise (95.0%) > aerobic exercise (64.4%) > aerobic combined with resistance exercise (60.7%) > routine nursing (22.9%) > no intervention (7.0%). In relieving anxiety, aerobic exercise (72.4%) > routine nursing (69.0%) > aerobic combined with resistance exercise (55.3%) > no intervention (3.4%). In improving self-worth, aerobic combined with resistance exercise (94.0%) > resistance exercise (67.3%) > aerobic exercise (35.1%) > no intervention (32.7%) > routine nursing (21.0%). ConclusionLimited evidence suggests that resistance exercise has advantages in improving depression in children and adolescents, aerobic exercise has advantages in relieving anxiety in children and adolescents, and aerobic combined with resistance exercise has advantages in improving self-worth in children and adolescents. Due to the limitation of the number and quality of included studies, more high-quality studies are needed to verify the above conclusions.

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  • Effects of guide-recommended treatment strategies on asthma symptom scores in moderate-to-severe asthma patients aged 5-18 years: a network meta-analysis

    ObjectivesTo evaluate the improvement of symptoms in patients with moderate to severe asthma aged 5-18 years treated with GINA (Global Initiative for Asthma) guidelines by network meta-analysis. Methods Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) about asthma patients aged 5 to 18 years with reported asthma symptom scores were collected from PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, CNKI, WanFang Data, VIP, SinoMed and clinical trial registry platform (ClinicalTrials.gov). The search time limit was from the inception to August 26, 2023. After two researchers independently screened literature, extracted data and evaluated the risk of bias of included studies, Stata 15.0 software was used for network meta-analysis. ResultsA total of 23 studies were included, 23 of which reported daytime asthma symptom scores. Compared with symptom scores in the low-dose ICS group, there was a statistically significant difference in improvement of daytime symptoms between low-dose ICS+LABA+LTRA (SMD=−1.4, 95%CI −1.99 to −0.81) and low-dose ICS+LABA+SABA (SMD=−1.43, 95%CI −2.48 to −0.39). Symptom scores for nighttime asthma were reported in 20 RCTs, and there was a statistically significant difference in symptom scores for low-dose ICS+LABA+LTRA (SMD=−1.20, 95%CI −2.20 to −0.21) compared with the low-dose ICS group. After the ranking of efficacy, the number one asthma symptom score in both daytime and nighttime was low-dose ICS+LABA+LTRA group. ConclusionLow dose ICS+LABA+LTRA has the best efficacy in improving daytime and nighttime asthma symptom scores.

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