校本干预对南非Gqeberha低社会经济社区四年级儿童身体成分的影响

IF 0.2 Q4 PEDIATRICS
S. Nqweniso, R. Durandt, L. Adams, J. Degen, S. Gall, M. Gerber, N. Joubert, Ivan Müller, D. Smith, H. Seelig, P. Steinmann, Nicole Probst-Hensch, J. Utzinger, U. Pühse, C. Walter
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景。南非(SA)弱势社区的儿童受到营养不足和营养过剩的双重负担的困扰。由此导致的超重和肥胖,以及发育迟缓,都是成年期慢性病的危险因素。目标。目的:确定以学校为基础的干预措施对南非格格伯哈地区低社会经济社区四年级儿童身体成分的影响。方法。对来自8所学校的儿童进行了一项随机对照试验。学校被随机分配,要么进行为期10周的学校干预(4所学校),要么进行对照(4所学校)。干预措施包括几个部分,每个干预学校接受以下措施的不同组合:体育活动、健康和卫生教育以及营养补充教育。使用标准化、质量控制的方法评估对儿童身体成分的影响。评估身高和体重以计算身体质量指数(BMI),并通过皮肤褶皱(三头肌和肩胛下)的厚度测量体脂百分比。结果。总的来说,898名8 - 11岁的儿童(458名男孩和440名女孩)参加了这项试验。随着时间的推移,儿童的身体质量指数、年龄BMI和体脂百分比显著增加。男孩和女孩的增长相似。体重过轻的儿童体脂保持不变,而体重正常和(特别是)超重/肥胖的儿童体脂增加。在体重正常的儿童中,体育活动干预(单独或结合健康教育)减轻了体脂水平的增加。在超重/肥胖儿童中也观察到类似的模式,但仅在体育活动干预队列中。结论。我们的研究表明,体重正常的儿童有变得超重的风险,而已经超重/肥胖的儿童体重增加的风险更大。身体活动干预(单独或与健康教育相结合)可以减轻体重正常儿童以及超重/肥胖儿童体脂的增加。我们的研究结果表明,以学校为基础的体育活动、营养、健康和卫生干预措施可以对儿童的身体构成产生有益的影响。需要进一步分析研究如何设计(以学校为基础的)体育活动干预措施,以改善社会经济地位较低地区儿童的健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of school-based interventions on body composition of grade-4 children from lower socioeconomic communities in Gqeberha, South Africa
Background. South African (SA) children from disadvantaged communities are plagued by a double burden of under- and over-nutrition. The resulting overweight and obesity on the one hand, and stunting on the other, are risk factors for chronic diseases in adulthood. Objective. To determine the effect of school-based interventions on body composition of grade-4 children from lower socioeconomic communities in the Gqeberha region, SA. Methods. A cluster-randomised controlled trial was carried out with children from 8 schools. Schools were randomly assigned, either to a 10-week school-based intervention (4 schools) or a control condition (4 schools). The intervention comprised several arms, with each intervention school receiving a different combination of the following measures: physical activity, health and hygiene education, and nutrition education with supplementation. Effects on children’s body composition were evaluated using standardised, quality-controlled methods. Height and weight were assessed to calculate body mass index (BMI), and percentage body fat was measured via thickness of skinfolds (triceps and subscapular). Results. Overall, 898 children (458 boys and 440 girls) aged 8 - 11 years participated in the trial. Children’s BMI, BMI-for-age and percentage body fat increased significantly over time. Increases were similar in boys and girls. Body fat remained unchanged in underweight children, whereas increases occurred in normal weight and (particularly) overweight/obese peers. In normal-weight children, the physical activity intervention (either alone or combined with health education) mitigated increments in body fat levels. A similar pattern was observed in overweight/obese children, but only in the physical activity intervention cohort alone. Conclusion. Our study shows that normal-weight children are at risk of becoming overweight and children who are already overweight/ obese are at even greater risk of gaining weight. The physical activity intervention (alone or in combination with health education) can mitigate increases in body fat in normal-weight children as well as in overweight/obese children. Our findings reveal that school-based physical activity, nutrition and health and hygiene interventions can have beneficial effects on children’s body composition. Further analyses are needed to examine how (school-based) physical activity interventions should be designed to improve children’s health in lower socioeconomic areas.
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CiteScore
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