| Literature DB >> 26627495 |
Tommy L S Visscher1, Stef P J Kremers2.
Abstract
The aim of this review is to discuss the state of the art regarding the field of health promotion in the context of childhood obesity prevention in order to learn how we can better prevent childhood obesity. Challenges have been identified that exist within the different steps of health promotion programme development and implementation. Important steps forward include studying behaviours and determinants of behaviours as clusters, upgrading the importance of distal environmental factors in modelling determinants and understanding determinants as a dynamic system: a complex of interacting elements. An important note is that the process of implementation and the analysis thereof should more often come before the analysis of behaviours and the determinants of behaviour. In applied research, the expertise from the 'real world' practitioners should be used in an early stage to find out whether the answers on research questions really help us in preventing childhood obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Applied research; Community-based interventions; Evaluation research; Intervention Mapping; Process evaluation; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26627495 PMCID: PMC4514909 DOI: 10.1007/s13679-015-0167-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Obes Rep ISSN: 2162-4968
How can we better prevent childhood obesity according to the different steps in the Intervention Mapping (IM) protocol [12•]?
| IM step [ | The evidence | How can we better prevent childhood obesity? |
|---|---|---|
| Needs assessment | Childhood obesity is increasing. There are suggestions for downward trends. | Study long-term trends, severe categories and other measures than BMI. |
| Analysis of the health problem | Childhood obesity is associated with impaired health. | Study health consequences in the non-obese as well, do not focus on BMI alone and include non-medical consequences including stigmatisation. |
| Analysis of health-related behaviours | Multiple behaviours play a role in determining energy balance, and they differ across target groups. | Include patterns or clusters of behaviours in the analysis of behaviour. |
| Analysis of determinants of behaviours | Both personal and environmental determinants play a role. | Study determinants of patterns or clusters of behaviours, and study the interaction between personal and environmental determinants in quantitative studies. |
| Analysis of programme elements | Many components play a role. | Studying programme components is important, even after having started, in order to further improve the programme when sustained, and for others across the globe. |
| Analysis of opportunities for implementation and sustainability | Knowledge and expertise regarding opportunities come from different fields of expertise. | Analysis of opportunities is of key importance for successful implementation. |
| Analysis of process and effectiveness | Effectiveness studies are more common than process evaluations. One explanation is that process evaluation often relies on qualitative research methodologies. | Convince reviewers and editors regarding the importance of qualitative studies. |