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. 2021 Sep 23;2021(9):CD007651. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007651.pub3

Farmer 2017.

Study characteristics
Methods Study design: cluster‐RCT
Participants School inclusion criteria: state primary schools (Years 1 to 8 that are fully funded by the state and are co‐educational) with at least 150 pupils and a school decile ranking of 1 to 6 
School exclusion criteria:
Student inclusion criteria: children in school years 2 and 4
Student exclusion criteria: no exclusion criteria
Setting: school
Age group: children
Gender distribution: females and males
Country where trial was performed: New Zealand
Interventions Intervention: researchers, play worker, and school community worked together and received funding over the course of 1 year to develop a playground action plan tailored for each intervention school (e.g. addition of more interactive play equipment, alterations to school rules and policies). The majority of recommendations involved no to little cost, such as leaving trees that had been cut down in pieces or letting the grass grow long to encourage imaginative play, re‐purposing real estate signs for sledding down hills, purchasing raincoats and gumboots to allow outside play when wet, and using plastic piping and sand for water play
Comparator: asked not to change anything in school play spaces
Duration of intervention: 2 years
Duration of follow‐up: 2 years
Number of schools: 16
Theoretical framework: —
Outcomes PA duration
BMI
Study registration ACTRN12612000675820 (retrospectively registered)
Publication details Language of publication: English 
Funding: non‐commercial funding (research funding body)
Publication status: peer‐reviewed journal
Stated aim for study "The aim of our 2‐year cluster RCT (PLAY) was to determine whether providing greater opportunities for risk and challenge in primary schools increased PA and reduced relative body weight over the long term. A secondary aim considered the effect of the intervention on how children interacted with 1 another which forms the basis of a separate paper"
Notes  
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk Quote from publication: "pairs of schools were created by matching for region, school roll and decile ranking, and were randomly assigned to intervention or control by tossing a coin"
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Low risk Comment: coin toss used
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias)
All outcomes High risk Comment: participants not blinded
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias)
All outcomes Low risk Quote from publication: "measurements were obtained … by researchers blinded to group allocation"
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
Anthropometrics, Fitness Low risk Quote from publication: "the missing data were imputed using chained equations assuming that the data were missing at random"
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
Physical activity and sedentary time Low risk Quote from publication: "the missing data were imputed using chained equations assuming that the data were missing at random"
Selective reporting (reporting bias) High risk Comment: bullying, steps/d, nutrition not reported
Cluster RCT ‐ Recruitment bias High risk Comment: students enrolled after randomisation
Cluster RCT ‐ Baseline imbalance Low risk Comment: clusters similar; models adjusted
Cluster RCT ‐ Loss of clusters Low risk Comment: no loss of clusters
Cluster RCT ‐ Incorrect analysis Low risk Comment: clustering accounted for in analysis