| Literature DB >> 26137843 |
Elisabet Llauradó1, Magaly Aceves-Martins2, Lucia Tarro3, Ignasi Papell-Garcia4, Francesc Puiggròs5, Lluís Arola6,7, Jordi Prades-Tena8, Marta Montagut9, Carlota M Moragas-Fernández10, Rosa Solà11, Montse Giralt12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The encouragement of healthy lifestyles for obesity prevention in young people is a public health priority. The European Youth Tackling Obesity (EYTO) project is a multicentric intervention project with participation from the United Kingdom, Portugal, the Czech Republic and Spain. The general aim of the EYTO project is to improve lifestyles, including nutritional habits and physical activity practice, and to prevent obesity in socioeconomically disadvantaged and vulnerable adolescents. The EYTO project works through a peer-led social marketing intervention that is designed and implemented by the adolescents of each participating country. Each country involved in the project acts independently. This paper describes the "Som la Pera" intervention Spanish study that is part of the EYTO project. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26137843 PMCID: PMC4490735 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1920-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Spanish Intervention Schedule of the European Youth Tackling Obesity (EYTO) Project
General study characteristics
| Arm | High school information | Assigned interventions | Population | Primary and secondary outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention group | High-school A | The intervention group will receive an intervention consisting of challenges designed by 5 ACCs. These activities must have social marketing criteria. | High-school A | Primary outcome: consumption of fruits and vegetables, physical activity practice, and TV/computer/game console use. Secondary outcomes: breakfast consumption, engagement with local recreation and obesity prevalence |
| The intervention group received challenges designed by ACCs that promote healthy lifestyles. | Economically disadvantaged | Students from high schools from low-income neighbourhoods, who are 13 to 16 years of age: | ||
| Size: 3 classes/level | a) 3 to 5 ACCs | |||
| Public | b) 80-100 adolescents | |||
| Reus | ||||
| High-school B | High-school B | |||
| Economically disadvantaged | Students from high schools from low-income neighbourhoods, 2who are 13 to 16 years of age: | |||
| Size: 4 classes/level | a) 2 to 5 ACCs | |||
| Public | b) 80-100 adolescents | |||
| Reus | ||||
| Control group | High-school A | No intervention is assigned for this group. | High-school A | The same outcomes were measured with the same tools and over the same time frame as in the intervention group. |
| The control group no received challenges to promote healthy lifestyles. | Economically disadvantaged | Students from high schools from low-income neighbourhoods, who are 13 to 16 years of age: | ||
| Size: 3 classes/level | b) 80-100 adolescents | |||
| Public | ||||
| Reus | ||||
| High-school B | High-school B | |||
| Economically disadvantaged | Students from high schools from low-income neighbourhoods, who are 13 to 16 years of age: | |||
| Size: 4 classes/level | b) 80-100 adolescents | |||
| Public | ||||
| Reus |
Use of SM in the intervention
| Research group | Adolescent Challenge Creators (ACCs) | Research group and Adolescent Challenge Creators (ACCs) |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| 3. |
| The peer-led model attracts the motivation of adolescents to participate and interact in the intervention, because adolescents prepare activities directed to adolescents. In this way, it has in mind their motivations and behaviours. | Aims to improve the consumption of fruits and vegetables, PA practice, and breakfast consumption and decrease the TV, PC and video game behaviour. | It used the behavioural change framework, taking into account the “Behaviour Change Wheel” (Michie, van Stralen, & West, 2011). |
| 5. | 4. | 6. |
| The consideration of the cost-effectiveness of the intervention will be evaluated at the end-of-intervention. | The peer-led model motivates adolescents to participate and interact in the intervention because adolescents prepare activities directed towards adolescents. In this way, it has in mind their motivations and behaviours. | The 5 adolescent coordinators discussed the enablers and barriers that adolescents face when making behavioural changes. From this debate, some changes were proposed to facilitate the process by including stakeholders. |
|
| 7. | |
| It contributed to informing using social media, educating using activities designed by adolescent coordinators and social media, and supporting using visual material in high-schools and social media. The design and control will be applied using the suggestions provided by 5 adolescent coordinators. | The intervention is focused on adolescents 13 to 16 years of age who attend the participant high-schools and are from low socioeconomic status neighbourhoods. |
Social Marketing National Benchmark Criteria (SMBC) developed by the National Social Marketing Centre (NSMC) UK [23]
Outcomes measurements in the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study (HBSC) Survey
| Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study Items | Outcome measured | Question | Possible answers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Eating habits | Nutritional behaviour. Fruit, vegetable and water consumption. | How many times a week do you usually eat or drink (fruits, vegetables, sweets, coke or other soft drinks that contain sugar)…? | Never, less than once a week, once a week, 2–4 days a week, 5–6 days a week, once a day, every day, every day more than once every day. |
| (primary outcomes) | Breakfast quantity and quality | How often do you usually have breakfast (more than a glass of milk or fruit juice)? |
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| |||
| Physical activity | Physical activity practice | Over the past 7 days, on how many days were you physically active for a total of at least 60 min per day? | 0 days, 1 day, 2 days, 3 days, 4 days, 5 days, 6 days, 7 days. |
| (primary outcomes) | |||
| Outside school hours: How often do you usually exercise in your free time so much that you get out of breath or sweat? | Every day, 4–6 times a week, 2–3 times a week, once a week, once a month, less than once a month, never. | ||
| Outside school hours: How many hours a week do you usually exercise in your free time so much that you get out of breath or sweat? | None, about half an hour, about 1 h, about 2 to 3 h, about 4 to 6 h, about 7 h or more. | ||
| Sedentary behaviour | Sedentary behaviour | About how many hours a day you usually watch television (includes DVD and videos) in your free time? | Weekdays: None at all, about half an hour a day, about 1 h a day, about 2 h a day, about 3 h a day, about 4 h a day, about 5 h a day, about 6 h a day, about 7 or more hours a day. |
| (primary outcomes) | Weekends: None at all, about half an hour a day, about 1 h a day, about 2 h a day, about 3 h a day, about 4 h a day, about 5 h a day, about 6 h a day, about 7 or more hours a day. | ||
| About how many hours a day do you usually play games on a computer or games console (PlayStation, Xbox, GameCube, etc.) in your free time? | Weekdays: None at all, about half an hour a day, about 1 h a day, about 2 h a day, about 3 h a day, about 4 h a day, about 5 h a day, about 6 h a day, about 7 or more hours a day. | ||
| About how many hours a day do you usually use a computer for chatting on-line, internet, emailing, homework, etc. in your free time? | Weekends: None at all, about half an hour a day, about 1 h a day, about 2 h a day, about 3 h a day, about 4 h a day, about 5 h a day, about 6 h a day, about 7 or more hours a day. | ||
| Self-confidence | Weight control and body image | At the present, are you on a diet or doing something else to lose weight? | No, my weight is fine; No, but I should lose some weight; No, because I need to put on weight; Yes. |
| (secondary outcomes) | |||
| Body mass index (secondary outcomes) | Perceived obesity and overweight prevalence | How much do you weigh without clothes? | Free space for answer. |
| How tall are you without shoes? | Free space for answer. |
Items obtained from the Health Behaviour in School-Aged Children (HBSC) 2009/2010 Ref. [35]
Spanish EYTO participation, schedule of enrolment, interventions and assessment
| Study period | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Enrolment | Allocation | Post-allocation | ||||||
| Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | ||||||
| Timepoint | -t1 | a0 | t1 | t2 | t3 | t4 | t5 | t6 |
| May 2014(after CEIC approval) | May 2014 | May 2014 | May 2014 | May 2014 | September 2014 | September 2014 | October 2014 | |
| High-Schools of low income in Reus are included in this phase. | 4 high-school are randomly chosen, 2 in the intervention and 2 in the control group | Control High-school meeting, Separate Intervention high-school meeting and 5 ACC selection | Social marketing, health promotion and communication training for 5 ACCs | Each participant answered the HBSC Survey. | Implementation of challenges by the 5 ACCs with help of stakeholders for their peers. | Preparation of the ACC presentation of the first academic Spanish intervention at the EYTO meeting in London. | Meeting of 5 ACCs from the 4 EYTO participating countries in London to pool designed activities and exchange ideas. Successful intervention activities can be re-implemented. | |
| Randomisation is performed. | Design of the intervention. Information and informed consent signed | Implementation of interventions by the 5 ACCs for their peers in high-school for 12 weeks. | ||||||
| Enrolment: | 360–400 adolescents from low-income neighbourhoods. | |||||||
| Eligibility screen | X | X | ||||||
| Informed consent | ||||||||
| [List other procedures] | ||||||||
| Allocation | 180–200 from intervention group and 180–200 from control group | |||||||
| Intervention | Training of 5 ACCs to design activities | HBSC Survey Implementation of activities during 12-week period | Implementation of social event challenges in the community and local markets for their peers | Evaluate the activities performed during 12-week period (1st academic year) | ||||
| Control | This group did not receive any interventions | HBSC Survey | ||||||
| Assessments: List baseline variables | X | X | X | X | X | |||
| List primary and secondary outcome variables for 200 participants in the intervention and 200 participants in the control group | Fruit and vegetable consumption, breakfast consumption, physical activity practice and sedentary behaviours. | |||||||
| Study period | ||||||||
| Post-allocation | Close-out September 2015 | |||||||
| Phase 4 | Phase 5 | |||||||
| Timepoint | t7 | t8 | t9 | t10 | t11 | t12 | ||
| November 2014 | February 2015 | Mar 2015 | Sept 2015 | Sept 2015 | Sept 2015 | |||
| Activities re-implemented by 5 ACCs for their peers in the intervention group high-schools during a 12-week period (2nd academic year) | Challenges designed by the 5 ACCs for their peers with stakeholder help | Preparation of the presentation on the Spanish intervention for the EYTO meeting in Spain | Meeting of 5 ACCs from the 4 EYTO participating countries in Reus, Spain. | Report of intervention challenges to the 4 EYTO countries and web presentation and analysis of data. | EYTO Final report including intervention challenges and Results of lifestyle outcomes | |||
| Interventions: | ||||||||
| Intervention | Implementation of activities during a 12-week period (2nd academic year) | HBSC Survey Intervention implementation | ||||||
| Control | HBSC Survey | |||||||
| Assessments: | X | X | ||||||
| List primary and secondary outcome variables | ||||||||
| for 200 participants in the intervention and | ||||||||
| 200 participants in the control group | February 2015, at the end of intervention | End of the participation of the 5 ACCs | Fruit and vegetable consumption. | |||||
| Physical activity Practice. Sedentary behaviours. | ||||||||