The inclusion of parents or carers in the consultation process of developing health-promotion activities in the Australian context.
by Paul Bennett
Co-authored with - Gladman, J.
(2012) Health Education Journal, in Print
Objective: Patterns of health behaviour and lifestyle established in childhood carry on into adulthood.
Parents... more
Objective: Patterns of health behaviour and lifestyle established in childhood carry on into adulthood.
Parents and carers have strong influences on the establishment of these patterns. Despite such influences,
parents and carers are often omitted from the planning process in health-promotion and early intervention
activities. This paper examines the literature to quantify the amount of consultation that occurs.
Method: A systemic review of the available literature was conducted of papers published in English
between 1998 and 2008 using OVID, Medline, CIAP, CINAHL, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, INFORMET and
PubMed databases. The search was not limited to age; however, some papers indicted that their research
were restricted to children over the age of five.
Results: Three hundred and thirty one articles were retrieved of which 32 met the inclusion criteria. It
was found that parents and carers are reliable and accurate reporters of the objective components of their
child’s health, such as physical functioning, but unreliable when it comes to subjective components including
pain and emotional psychosocial functioning of their children. However, parents and carers are often omitted
or at best superficially included in the development of health-promotion and early intervention programmes
in Australia.
Conclusions: The lack of consultation with parents and carers in health-promotion and early interventions
programmes by policy makers, programme developers and health advocates results in decreased consumer
ownership, dissatisfaction with service delivery and creates barriers to engagement. Without adequate and
appropriate engagement of parents and carers, early interventions and health-promotion programmes will
result in superficial and short-term health outcomes.
Keywords
carers and children, health promotion, parents, perception
