An environmental intervention to prevent excess weight gain in African-American students: a pilot study.

Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA. NewtonRL@pbrc.edu

American journal of health promotion : AJHP. 2010;(5):340-3

Abstract

PURPOSE To examine the influence of an environmental intervention to prevent excess weight gain in African-American children. DESIGN Single-group repeated measures. SETTING The intervention was delivered to a school composed of African-American children. PARTICIPANTS Approximately 45% (N = 77) of enrolled second through sixth grade students. INTERVENTION The 18-month intervention was designed to alter the school environment to prevent excess weight gain by making healthier eating choices and physical activity opportunities more available. MEASURES Body mass index percentile was the primary outcome variable. Body mass index z score was also calculated, and percent body fat, using bioelectrical impedance, was also measured. Total caloric intake (kilocalories) and percent kilocalories from fat, carbohydrate, and protein were measured by digital photography. Minutes of physical activity and sedentary behavior were selfreported. ANALYSIS Mixed-models analysis was used with covarying baseline values. RESULTS Boys maintained, whereas girls increased, percent body fat over 18 months (p = .027). All children decreased percent of kilocalories consumed from total and saturated fat and increased carbohydrate intake and self-reported physical activity during the intervention (p < .025). Body mass index z score, sedentary behavior, and total caloric intake were unchanged. CONCLUSION The program may have resulted in maintenance of percent body fat in boys. The percent body fat in girls steadily increased, despite similar behavioral changes as boys. School-based interventions targeting African-American children should investigate strategies that can be effective across gender.

Methodological quality

Metadata

MeSH terms : Obesity