Effectiveness of the Children's Fitness Tax Credit: A scoping review

被引:0
|
作者
Spence, John C. [1 ]
Mangan, Amie [1 ]
Sivak, Allison [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alberta, Fac Kinesiol Sport & Recreat, Edmonton, AB, Canada
[2] Univ Alberta, Geoffrey & Robin Sperber Hlth Sci Lib, Edmonton, AB, Canada
关键词
Adolescents; Child; Public health policy; Sports; Taxation; enfant; politique de sante publique; sports; fiscalite; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY;
D O I
10.17269/s41997-024-00861-1
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
ObjectivesA scoping review was conducted to synthesize the literature examining impact of the Children's Fitness Tax Credit (CFTC) on the physical activity (PA) of Canadian children. Specifically, we posed two research questions seeking evidence for: (1) equitable take-up (e.g., claiming, use) of the CFTC by Canadian families; and (2) effectiveness of the CFTC in promoting or facilitating PA or sport participation among Canadian children and adolescents.MethodsA search was conducted in May 2023 of five databases (e.g., Medline, Scopus) and hand searching using terms such as children, adolescents, physical activity, sport, tax credit or taxation. Documents were included if they were data-based studies, available in English or French, and related to the research questions. They were then coded for characteristics of the document, sample, data, behaviour, and findings.SynthesisOf 318 possible documents, 7 documents revealing 26 findings were included after a full-article scan. Most of the documents were published and had a national scope. The most frequent source of data was from parental reports (62%), with the most common types of behaviour being tax claim take-up rates (31%) or PA (27%). For the two research questions, the available evidence suggests no support for equitable take-up of the CFTC or the amount claimed, and most of the findings indicated no (64%) or limited effectiveness of the tax credit (29%).ConclusionThe CFTC had limited to no impact in promoting PA among Canadian children, particularly for those experiencing low income. ObjectifsNous avons mene une etude de champ pour resumer la litterature scientifique sur les effets du Credit d'impot pour la condition physique des enfants (CICPE) sur l'activite physique (AP) des enfants canadiens. Plus precisement, nous avons pose deux questions de recherche pour recueillir des donnees au sujet de : 1) l'equite du recours (p. ex. demandes, utilisation) au CICPE par les familles canadiennes; et 2) l'efficacite du CICPE pour promouvoir ou faciliter l'AP ou la participation au sport chez les enfants et les adolescents canadiens.MethodeEn mai 2023, nous avons consulte cinq bases de donnees (dont Medline et Scopus) et effectue une recherche manuelle a l'aide de termes comme << enfants >>, << adolescents >>, << activite physique >>, << sports >>, << credit d'impot >> ou << fiscalite >>. Nous avons inclus les etudes provenant de bases de donnees, disponibles en anglais ou en francais et liees aux questions de recherche. Ces documents ont ensuite ete codes en fonction de leurs caracteristiques, de leur echantillon, de leurs donnees, de leurs constats et des comportements etudies.SyntheseSur 318 documents possibles, 7 documents revelant 26 constats ont ete inclus a la suite d'un balayage complet des articles. La plupart des documents etaient publies et de portee nationale. La source de donnees la plus frequente etait les declarations parentales (62 %); les types de comportements les plus courants etaient les taux de demande de credit d'impot (31 %) et l'AP (27 %). Pour les deux questions de recherche, les donnees disponibles n'appuient pas l'equite du recours au CICPE ou du montant reclame, et la plupart des constats indiquent que l'efficacite du credit d'impot a ete nulle (64 %) ou limitee (29 %).ConclusionLe CICPE a eu un effet nul ou limite sur la promotion de l'AP chez les enfants canadiens, surtout dans les menages a faible revenu.
引用
收藏
页码:356 / 366
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Effectiveness of the Children’s Fitness Tax Credit: A scoping review
    John C. Spence
    Amie Mangan
    Allison Sivak
    Canadian Journal of Public Health, 2024, 115 : 356 - 366
  • [2] Uptake and effectiveness of the Children's Fitness Tax Credit in Canada: the rich get richer
    John C Spence
    Nicholas L Holt
    Julia K Dutove
    Valerie Carson
    BMC Public Health, 10
  • [3] Uptake and effectiveness of the Children's Fitness Tax Credit in Canada: the rich get richer
    Spence, John C.
    Holt, Nicholas L.
    Dutove, Julia K.
    Carson, Valerie
    BMC PUBLIC HEALTH, 2010, 10
  • [4] Uptake of the Children's Fitness Tax Credit in Canada: A Provincial/Territorial Comparison
    Fisher, Koren L.
    von Tigerstrom, Barbara
    Larre, Tamara
    Cameron, Christine
    Chad, Karen E.
    Mawani, Amin
    Reeder, Bruce A.
    Tremblay, Mark S.
    OBESITY, 2011, 19 : S126 - S126
  • [5] Fitness tax credit
    Collier, Roger
    CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION JOURNAL, 2011, 183 (08) : E470 - E470
  • [6] A unified children's tax credit
    Carasso, A
    Rohaly, J
    Steuerle, CE
    97th Annual Conference on Taxation, Proceedings, 2005, : 221 - 231
  • [7] A review of children's fitness testing
    Harris, Jo
    Cale, Lorraine
    EUROPEAN PHYSICAL EDUCATION REVIEW, 2006, 12 (02) : 201 - 225
  • [8] Kolm's Tax, Tax Credit, and the Flat Tax
    Fleurbaey, Marc
    Maniquet, Francois
    SOCIAL ETHICS AND NORMATIVE ECONOMICS: ESSAYS IN HONOUR OF SERGE-CHRISTOPHE KOLM, 2011, : 217 - +
  • [9] On the generosity and effectiveness of the research and development tax credit
    Boucher, Thomas O.
    ENGINEERING ECONOMIST, 2018, 63 (04): : 319 - 342
  • [10] Field-based physical fitness assessment in preschool children: A scoping review
    Ke, Dandan
    Maimaitijiang, Remili
    Shen, Shaoshuai
    Kishi, Hidetada
    Kurokawa, Yusuke
    Suzuki, Koya
    FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS, 2022, 10