| Literature DB >> 27955648 |
Dorothea Kesztyüs1,2, Romy Lauer3, Meike Traub3, Tibor Kesztyüs4, Jürgen Michael Steinacker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Based on the World Health Organization's global school health initiative we investigate intervention effects of statewide health promotion in schools on the numbers of children's sick days and visits to a physician, and parental days off work due to child illness.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Health promotion; Parents; Physicians; Schools; Sick leave; Utilization
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27955648 PMCID: PMC5153907 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3903-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flowchart of participants/datasets in the BW Study 2010–2011. Number of respective written informed consents and available data sets from anthropometric measurements and parental questionnaires at several stages of the outcome evaluation process
Items in the parental questionnaires for the outcome variables in the BW Study 2010
| Outcome variable | Question | Response options |
|---|---|---|
| Child’s sick days | On how many days during the last year of school or kindergarten was your child unable to go to school/kindergarten because they were sick? | Number of days |
| Visits to a physician | How often during the last year of school or kindergarten did you have to visit a physician because your child was sick? | Number of visits to a physician |
| Days off work mother/father | If you are employed: On how many days during the last year of school or kindergarten did you have to stay off work because your child was sick? | Father: number of days Mother: number of days |
Baseline characteristics of participants in the BW Study 2010
| Missing Values | Intervention ( | Control ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boys, n (%) | 536 (50.0) | 459 (52.7) | 995 (51.2) | |
| Age, years [m (sd)] | 7.09 (0.64) | 7.06 (0.64) | 7.08 (0.64) | |
| Grade 1, n (%) | 550 (51.3) | 474 (54.4) | 1024 (52.7) | |
| Migration background, n (%) | 297 | 318 (35.1)1 | 207 (28.0) | 525 (31.9) |
| Anthropometry | ||||
| BMIPERC, [m (sd)] | 50 | 49.13 (28.07) | 48.75 (27.67) | 48.96 (27.88) |
| Waist circumference, cm [m (sd)] | 54 | 55.72 (5.87) | 55.41 (5.89) | 55.58 (5.88) |
| WHtR,[m (sd)] | 55 | 0.45 (0.04) | 0.45 (0.04) | 0.45 (0.04) |
| Overweight/obesity, n (%) | 50 | 107 (10.3) | 83 (9.7) | 190 (10.0) |
| Abdominal obesity, n (%) | 55 | 90 (8.7) | 68 (8.0) | 158 (8.4) |
| Parental characteristics | ||||
| Single parent, n (%) | 265 | 101 (10.9) | 76 (10.1) | 177 (10.5) |
| Tertiary family educational level, n (%) | 323 | 293 (32.7) | 229 (31.6) | 522 (32.2) |
| Household income < 1750 €, n (%) | 452 | 113 (14.0) | 94 (13.8) | 207 (13.9) |
| Overweight/obesity (mother), n (%) | 363 | 279 (32.1) | 217 (30.5) | 496 (31.4) |
| Overweight/obesity (father), n (%) | 468 | 512 (62.3) | 386 (59.1) | 898 (60.9) |
| Abdominal obesity (mother), n (%) | 916 | 275 (49.0) | 206 (44.2) | 481 (46.8) |
| Abdominal obesity (father), n (%) | 1011 | 386 (75.2) | 306 (73.0) | 692 (74.2) |
| Smoking (mother), n (%) | 287 | 172 (20.7) | 175 (21.2) | 347 (21.0) |
| Smoking (father), n (%) | 356 | 234 (29.4) | 238 (30.1) | 472 (29.7) |
| Days off work (mother), median [m (sd)] | 309a | 2 [3.09 (4.62)]2 | 0 [2.36 (4.23)] | 1 [2.77 (4.47)] |
| Employed (mother), n (%) | 302 | 657 (72.3) | 519 (70.9) | 1176 (71.7) |
| Working hours/week (mother), [m (sd)] | 21a | 20.83 (10.68) | 21.18 (11.79) | 20.99 (11.18) |
| Days off work (father), median [m (sd)] | 839a | 0 [0.78 (2.31)]2 | 0 [0.33 (1.19)] | 0 [0.56 (1.87)] |
| Employed (father), n (%) | 354 | 833 (95.6) | 694 (96.7) | 1527 (96.1) |
| Working hours/week (father), [m (sd)] | 86a | 43.60 (10.65) | 43.99 (10.35) | 43.78 (10.51) |
| Health and lifestyle characteristics | ||||
| Sick days, median [m (sd)] | 390 | 5 [7.50 (7.70)] | 5 [6.73 (5.97)] | 5 [7.15 (6.97)] |
| Visits to a physician, median [m (sd)] | 404 | 2 [2.99 (2.76)] | 2 [2.95 (3.23)] | 2 [2.97 (2.98)] |
| Playing outside > 60 min/day, n (%) | 296 | 607 (66.6)3 | 523 (71.2) | 1130 (68.6) |
| Physical active ≥ 4 days/week ≥ 60 min/day, n (%) | 320 | 238 (26.6) | 199 (27.3) | 437 (26.9) |
| 6 min run test, meter [m (sd)] | 63 | 839.67 (122.88)4 | 855.28 (120.10) | 846.69 (121.85) |
| Screen media > 1 h/day, n (%) | 250 | 144 (15.4) | 100 (13.2) | 244 (14.4) |
| Sugar sweetened beverages > 1 time/week, n (%) | 241 | 236 (25.1) | 180 (23.6) | 416 (24.4) |
| Skipping breakfast, n (%) | 236 | 97 (12.7) | 126 (13.4) | 223 (13.1) |
m mean, sd standard deviation, WHtR Waist-to-height ratio, a with regard to those who stated an employment
1 p = 0.002, 2 p < 0.001, 3 p = 0.048, 4 p = 0.006
Differences between baseline (2010) and follow-up (2011) in the BW Study
| Missing values | Intervention ( | Control ( | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sick days, m (sd) | 69 | −3.18 (7.08)1 | −2.31 (5.56) | −2.78 (6.44) |
| Visits to a physician, m (sd) | 126 | −0.85 (2.41) | −0.93 (2.70) | −0.88 (2.54) |
| Days off work (mother), m (sd) | 647 | −1.11 (3.89)2 | −0.52 (2.84) | −0.85 (3.48) |
| Days off work (father), m (sd) | 906 | −0.25 (2.21) | 0.06 (1.56) | −0.10 (1.94) |
m mean, sd standard deviation
1 p = 0.013, 2 p = 0.019
Fig. 2Longitudinal changes in outcome parameters between baseline (2010) and follow-up (2011) in the BW Study. Numerical changes during the period under observation regarding children’s sick days (n = 1310), children’s visits to a physician (n = 1253), maternal days off work (n = 473), and paternal days off work (n = 732) in order to care for a sick child
Results of the linear regression analysis for the change in children’s sick days between baseline (2010) and follow-up (2011) in the BW Study
| All ( | Grade 1 ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Covariate |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Intervention | −0.30 (0.22) | −0.02 | 0.182 | −0.83 (0.28) | −0.06 | 0.003 |
| Grade 1 | −1.15 (0.23) | 0.09 | <0.001 | |||
| Female | 0.30 (0.22) | 0.02 | 0.175 | 0.11 (0.28) | 0.01 | 0.708 |
| Migration background | 0.49 (0.26) | 0.03 | 0.060 | 0.59 (0.34) | 0.04 | 0.085 |
| Sick days baseline value | −0.74 (0.02) | 0.77 | <0.001 | −0.78 (0.02) | 0.83 | <0.001 |
|
| 0.62 | 0.69 | ||||
B regression coefficient, SE standard error, β standardized regression coefficient