Please note this application is under active development. If you spot any errors or something isn't working, please contact us at evidence.service@wales.nhs.uk.

Behavioral Counseling Interventions to Promote a Healthy Diet and Physical Activity for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Adults Without Known Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors: Updated Systematic Review for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Evidence Synthesis No. 217.

Patnode CD, Redmond N, Iacocca MO, Henninger M. (2022)

U.S. Preventive Services Task Force - N/A

Evidence Categories

  • Care setting: Community setting
  • Care setting: Primary care
  • Care setting: Virtual and digital
  • Population group: General Population
  • Population group: Adults living with overweight and obesity
  • Population group: Adults with poor diet
  • Intervention: Intra-/Inter-personal: Multicomponent programme in-person
  • Intervention: Intra-/Inter-personal: Multicomponent programme remote
  • Outcome: Healthy Eating: Fruit and veg intake
  • Outcome: Healthy Eating: Fibre intake
  • Outcome: Healthy Eating: Fat intake
  • Outcome: Healthy Eating: Salt intake
  • Outcome: Healthy Eating: Whole diet quality

Type of Evidence

Systematic Review

Aims

The authors state:

"We conducted this systematic review to support the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) in updating its 2017 recommendation on behavioral counseling to promote a healthy diet and physical activity in adults without known CVD risk factors."

Findings

The authors state:

  • "One-hundred and thirteen randomized clinical trials were included (N=129,993)."
  • "There was also consistent evidence that behavioral interventions improved participants’ dietary intake and physical activity levels."
  • "Meta-analysis indicated statistically significant associations between healthy diet counseling interventions (with or without physical activity messages) and measures of saturated fat (standardized mean difference [SMD], -0.5 [95% CI, -0.8 to -0.3]; 16 RCTs [n=48,661]; I2=97%), fiber (SMD, 0.2 [95% CI, 0.1 to 0.4]; 13 RCTs [n=47,571]; I2=94%), and daily servings of fruits and vegetables (1.1 [95% CI, 0.4 to 1.8]; 17 RCTs [n=53,711]; I2=99%)."
  • "Measurement of behavioral outcomes was extremely heterogeneous."

Conclusions

The authors state:

"The results of this systematic review update are consistent with the 2017 review on this topic. Healthy diet and physical activity behavioral interventions for persons without a known risk of CVD were associated with very small but statistically significant benefits across a variety of important intermediate health outcomes and small-to-moderate effects on dietary and physical activity behaviors. Very limited evidence exists regarding the health outcomes or harmful effects of these interventions."

Also In This Category

    No other evidence in this category.