Childhood Obesity Declines Project: A Different Methodology

Autor: Deborah Young-Hyman, Phyllis Ottley, Laura Kettel Khan, Jan Jernigan, Carrie Dooyema, Nicola Dawkins-Lyn, Tina J. Kauh, Carole Harris
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2018
Předmět:
Male
Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice

Pediatric Obesity
Adolescent
Childhood Obesity Declines Project (National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research - NCCOR)Guest Editors: Deborah Young-Hyman
PhD and Laura Kettel Khan
PhD

Endocrinology
Diabetes and Metabolism

030209 endocrinology & metabolism
Healthy eating
Health Promotion
Childhood obesity
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Active living
Environmental health
Prevalence
Medicine
Humans
030212 general & internal medicine
Community Health Services
Program Development
skin and connective tissue diseases
Child
Retrospective Studies
Obesity prevention
Nutrition and Dietetics
business.industry
Health Policy
medicine.disease
Obesity
United States
Child
Preschool

Pediatrics
Perinatology and Child Health

Female
sense organs
business
Popis: Background: The evidence for and our understanding of community-level strategies such as policies, system, and environmental changes that support healthy eating and active living is growing. However, researchers and evaluation scientists alike are still not confident in what to recommend for preventing or sustaining declines in the prevalence of obesity. Methods: The Systematic Screening and Assessment (SSA) methodology was adapted as a retrospective process to confirm obesity declines and to better understand what and how policies and programs or interventions may contribute as drivers. The Childhood Obesity Declines (COBD) project's adaptation of the SSA methodology consisted of the following components: (1) establishing and convening an external expert advisory panel; (2) identification and selection of sites reporting obesity declines; (3) confirmation and review of what strategies occurred and contextual factors were present during the period of the obesity decline; and (4) reporting the findings to sites and the field. Results/Discussion: The primary result of the COBD project is an in-depth examination of the question, “What happened and how did it happen in communities where the prevalence of obesity declined?” The primary aim of this article is to describe the project's methodology and present its limitations and strengths. Conclusions: Exploration of the natural experiments such that occurred in Anchorage, Granville County, New York City, and Philadelphia is the beginning of our understanding of the drivers and contextual factors that may affect childhood obesity. This retrospective examination allows us to: (1) describe targeted interventions; (2) examine the timeline and summarize intervention implementation; (3) document national, state, local, and institutional policies; and (4) examine the influence of the reach and potential multisector layering of interventions.
Databáze: OpenAIRE