| Literature DB >> 31947891 |
Hidayet Suha Yuksel1, Fatma Neşe Şahin1, Nebojsa Maksimovic2, Patrik Drid2, Antonino Bianco3.
Abstract
With the significant decrease in physical activity rates, the importance of intervention programs in the schools, where children spend a significant part of the day, has become indisputable. The purpose of this review is to systematically examine the possibility of school-based interventions on promoting physical activity and physical fitness as well as preventing obesity. A systematic approach adopting PRISMA statement was implemented in this study. Three different databases (2010-2019) were screened and primary and secondary school-based intervention programs measuring at least one variable of obesity, physical activity, or physical fitness were included. The risk of bias was assessed using the validated quality assessment tool for quantitative studies. Among 395 potentially related studies, 19 studies were found to meet the eligibility criteria. A general look at the studies examined reveals that among the outcomes, of which most (18/19) were examined, a significant improvement was provided in at least one of them. When the program details are examined, it can be said that the success rate of the physical activity-oriented programs is higher in all variables. School-based interventions can have important potential for obesity prevention and promotion of physical activity and fitness if they focus more on the content, quality, duration and priority of the physical activity.Entities:
Keywords: health promotion; intervention; obesity; physical activity; physical activity promotion; physical fitness; school; sedentary behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31947891 PMCID: PMC6981629 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17010347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1General framework of the systematic review. PA: Physical activity.
Quality assessment for studies.
| Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies | |
|---|---|
| (A) Selection bias | Do the individuals selected for the study represent the target population? |
| (B) Study design | Is the study defined as randomized? |
| (C) Confounders | Are there significant differences between pre-intervention groups? |
| (D) Blinding | Are the assessors aware of the intervention or the exposure of the participants? |
| (E) Data collection methods | Is the validity of the data collection tools shown? |
| (F) Withdrawals and dropouts | Were those who quit or were unable to complete reported? |
Figure 2Flow diagram of studies through the review process.
Summary of school-based intervention studies.
| Study | Design | Setting and Participants | Aim | Intervention Duration | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Parallel cluster intervention trial |
4 public schools in Karachi, Pakistan. 277 girls (IG: 131, CG: 146). | To examine the feasibility of the school-based program and its effect on blood pressure and body mass index among pre-adolescent girls. | Over 20 months | Strong |
|
| A non-randomized controlled trial |
2 religious and 2 secular schools in Israel. 396 fifth- and sixth-grade students (IG: 200, CG: 196). | To evaluate the effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle intervention on health knowledge, behavior, and anthropometric measurements. | 2011–2012 school year | Moderate |
|
| A non-randomized controlled trial |
Two schools in the cities of Pune and Nasik, India. 491 children (IG: 304, CG: 187). | To examine the 5-year impact of the program on preventing fat and improving PF and lifestyle. | 5 years | Moderate |
|
| A one-group, repeated measures design |
3290 children aged 4–12 years from southwest Scotland. | To examine body mass index standard deviation score changes following a Child Healthy Weight pilot intervention. | 10 weeks | Moderate |
|
| Mixed-effects model |
Six elementary-school districts in California (n = 1322). | To examine the relationship between PA breaks and PA and class behaviors. | 2013–2014 school year | Moderate |
|
| Randomized controlled trial |
Four primary schools in the Hunter Region, NSW, Australia. 213 children (mean age = 10.72 ± 0.6; %52 female) (IG: 118, CG: 95). | To evaluate the impact of a school-based PA intervention (Fit-4-Fun) on health-related fitness. | 8 weeks | Moderate |
|
| Cluster randomized, controlled study |
12 schools in Norway. 1324 students (11-year-old) (IG: 465, CG: 859). | To examine the effects of a multicomponent school-based intervention on anthropometric outcomes. | 20 months | Moderate |
|
| Cluster randomized controlled trial |
10 secondary schools in New South Wales, Australia. Baseline- IG: 645, CG: 505. Mid-point (12 months)- IG: 592, CG: 459. Follow-up (24 months)- IG: 560, CG: 425. | To report the secondary outcomes of the study; to determine whether the intervention impacted on adiposity outcomes (weight, body mass index (BMI), BMI z-score. | 12 months | Strong |
|
| Cluster randomized controlled trial |
60 primary schools in the southwest of England. 2221 Primary school children (IG: 1064, CG: 1157). | To investigate the effectiveness of a school-based intervention to increase PA, reduce sedentary behaviour, and increase fruit and vegetable consumption in children. | 5 years | Moderate |
|
| A cluster randomized controlled trial. |
28 classes from 15 elementary schools in Switzerland. 502 children (IG: 297, CG: 205). | To assess the effectiveness of a school-based PA program during one school year on physical and psychological health in children. | 9 months | Strong |
|
| Non-randomized controlled trial |
Four public schools in Changping District, Beijing of China. 921 children aged 7 to 15 years (IG: 388, CG: 533). | To assess the effectiveness of a school-based PA intervention during 12 weeks on obesity and related health outcomes in school children. | 12 weeks | Strong |
|
| A cluster randomized controlled trial |
8 classrooms of second- and third-grade children in Rochester, Minnesota. 51 children (IG: 29, CG: 22). | To evaluate the impact of the Let’s Go! 5-2-1-0 program in an elementary school. | 8 weeks | Moderate |
|
| A cluster randomized controlled study |
Six schools (IG: 4 schools, CG: 2 schools) in northern California. 879 students (IG: 583, CG: 296). | To examine the impact of Energy Balance for Kids with Play (EB4K with Play), on students’ PA, dietary habits and knowledge, and weight status over 2 years. | Over 2 years | Strong |
|
| A cluster randomized controlled trial. |
Three schools in the city of Reykjavik, Iceland. 321 students (IG: 151, CG: 170). | To assess the effects of a 2-year intervention program on body composition and objectively measured cardiorespiratory fitness. | 2 years | Moderate |
|
| A quasi-experimental design |
One public middle school in a suburb near Philadelphia 92 students (IG: 46, CG: 46). | To determine the effects of a school-based pedometer intervention (SBPI) on daily accrued steps, academic performance, attendance, tardiness, and fitness performance in middle school students. | 6 weeks | Strong |
|
| Non-randomized controlled trial |
Four schools (2 control, 2 intervention) in the Czech Republic. 175 students (IG: 88, CG: 87). | To investigate the effect of increased PA on increasing daily PA and decreasing obesity in 6–9-year children. | 2006–2008 | Strong |
|
| Randomized intervention study |
19 primary schools in France. 457 children aged 6 to 10 years (IG: 229, CG: 228). | To assess the effect of a PA program on body composition and PF. | 6 months | Strong |
|
| A pre-test and post-test control-group design |
Two primary schools in Potchefstroom, South Africa. 110 Grade 7 learners aged 12–13 years (IG: 40, CG: 70). | To evaluate the effects of a once-a-week enhanced quality PE program on the PA levels. | Over 12 weeks | Strong |
|
| Quasi-experimental, pre-post-trial with a parallel, non-equivalent control group |
20 schools in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. 1157 students in the year 2009 (IG: 198, CG:454), the year 2011 (IG: 196, CG: 309). | To examine the 2-year change in PA during and after school among students participating in a comprehensive school health (CSH) intervention. | 2008–2011 | Strong |
IG: Intervention group; CG: Control group; PF: Physical fitness.
Summary results of studies.
| Study | BMI (kg/m2) | Body Composition | Physical Activity Levels | Physical Fitness |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| + | NA | NA | NA |
|
| + | + | NA | NA |
|
| − | + | NA | + |
|
| + | NA | NA | NA |
|
| NA | NA | + | NA |
|
| + | + | + | + |
|
| + (Only girls) | − | NA | NA |
|
| + | NA | − | NA |
|
| NA | NA | − | NA |
|
| + | + | − | + |
|
| + | + | + | NA |
|
| − | NA | − | NA |
|
| + | NA | − | NA |
|
| − | − | NA | + |
|
| NA | NA | + | − |
|
| NA | NA | + | NA |
|
| − | − | NA | + |
|
| − | − | − | NA |
|
| NA | NA | + | NA |
The “+” symbol indicates significant difference, the “−” symbol indicates no significant difference, and the abbreviation “NA” indicates that the relevant variable has not been examined in the study.
Details of the studies.
| Study | Types and Intensities of School-Based Programs | Outcomes Measured | Results | Multiple Components | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Warm-up (The initial 5 min period) 20 min of aerobics The last 5 min comprised cool-down exercises. | ||||||
| Baseline Mean (SD): | Baseline Mean (SD): | ||||||
| The difference between systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and BMI z scores (BMIz) of the experimental group and control group was found to be significant (1.9 mm Hg, 0.7 mm hg and 0.55 kg/m2). | |||||||
|
| Eating a healthy breakfast, drinking water, PA, and reading food labels. Safe and attractive playgrounds Active play during break times | Overweight and obesity decreased significantly within the intervention group (from 25% to 17.9%, |
Nutrition education Healthy food education Family education | ||||
|
| PA, diet, and general health, Increased extracurricular and intracurricular PA sessions (Daily yoga-based breathing exercises; making PA a ‘scoring’ subject) |
Nutrition education Healthier school meals Health and nutrition education for teachers, pupils, and families | |||||
|
| 90-min, 10-week primary school intervention PA and HE education PA activity sessions |
|
|
Behavior change and parental engagement | |||
| Pre, mean (SD): 0.49 (1.16) | |||||||
| Post, mean (SD): 0.47 (1.17) | |||||||
| BMI-SDS: −0.03 (0.29) | |||||||
| Standardised BMI (BMI-SDS) scores were significantly decreased in the whole ( | |||||||
|
| 10 min of PA break |
Teacher education | |||||
|
| 8-week physical education lesson (60 min/week) 8-week home activity (3*20 min per week) 8-week daily break-time activity program (recess, lunch) |
Family engagement Home program | |||||
|
| 10 min of PA in classrooms Sports equipment for recess activities Pedometer | Beneficial effects were found for BMI ( |
Home/parents activities Lessons with student booklet Posters for classrooms Fruit and vegetable (FV) break | ||||
|
|
|
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Environment and family involvement Partnership and services: Activities involving the region and the family | ||||
| BMI (Baseline to 12 month): −0.28 | 0.012 | ||||||
| BMIz (Baseline to 12 month): −0.05 | 0.130 | ||||||
| There were group-by-time effects for weight and BMI (kg/m2) ( | |||||||
|
| Indirect intervention ways |
|
|
Teacher training Provision of lesson Child-parent interactive homework plans Preparation of school environment | |||
| The differences in mean: −1.35 min/day | 0.050 | ||||||
| BMIz Scores: −0.02 | 0.41 | ||||||
| Waist circumference: −0.12 | 0.03 | ||||||
| School-based intervention is not effective at increasing levels of PA, but it is effective at BMI and waist circumference. | |||||||
|
| 2 × 45 min/week: physical education lessons given by physical education teacher 3 × 45 min/week: physical education lessons given by classroom teacher Several 5-min short PA breaks 10 min/day: PA homework |
|
| ||||
| The z score of the sum of four skinfolds: −0.12 | 0.009 | ||||||
| Z scores for aerobic fitness: 0.17 | 0.04 | ||||||
| MDVA physical activity: 0.92 | 0.003 | ||||||
| A school-based PA intervention improved PA and fitness and reduced adiposity in children. | |||||||
|
| PE improvement Extracurricular PA for students | The reduction of BMI was statistically significant in the intervention group (−0.02 ± 0.06 kg/m2), compared with the increase of BMI in the control group (0.41 ± 0.08 kg/m2) (p < 0.001). |
PA at home | ||||
|
| (5) Fruits and Vegetables (2) Hours or Less of Recreational Screen Time (1) Hour of PA (0) Sugary Drinks 9 Hours of Sleep & Healthy Breakfast 7 Portion Sizes & Healthy Snacks 8 Wrap Up/Review |
|
|
|
Curriculum | ||
| BMI (kg/m2, median change: 0.2 | BMI (kg/m2, median change: 0.1 | 0.469 | |||||
| Number of pedometer steps per day (median): 2293.5 | Number of pedometer steps per day (median): 2651.3 | 0.929 | |||||
| There was no statistical difference in the improvement of healthy habits, BMI, or PA in the intervention group compared with the control group ( | |||||||
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| Intervention schools received one part-time RD coach and one full-time Playworks coach for 2 school years |
|
|
Collaboration with school personnel and families | |||
| School-day PA: −0.1 | |||||||
| BMIz scores total: −0.07 | |||||||
| There were no group differences in change in PA or dietary behaviors, although BMIz decreased overall by −0.07 ( | |||||||
|
| Organized field trips Promotion of active commute to and from school One extra class of physical education |
|
|
Teacher training Outdoor teaching | |||
| Cardiorespiratory fitness (W/kg: 0.37 | |||||||
| Waist circumference (cm): 0.15 | |||||||
| Skinfolds (mm): 0.10 | |||||||
| Body composition was not statistically significant ( | |||||||
|
| Self-monitoring through pedometer use Self-monitoring Goal-setting strategies Benefits of an active lifestyle Overcoming barriers to achieve an active lifestyle Social support PA replacing sedentary behavior Components of fitness. |
|
|
Curriculum | |||
| Pre-test Mean (SD): 9692 (476) | Pre-test Mean (SD): 9420 (446) | ||||||
| Step-count promotion program significantly increased daily accrued step counts versus control ( | |||||||
|
| 20-min recess with PA content (in gym/school playground) PA (playing) undertaken during after-school nursery (40 min to ≤ 90 min) 2–3 short breaks per day | There was a significant increase in daily activity levels compared to the control group (from 1718 to 3247 steps per day; and from 2.1 to 3.6 Kcal/Kg per day). The school-based intervention allows children to take more than 10,500 steps and reduces the risk of declined PA. | |||||
|
| 120 min (two times for 60 min) of supervised physical exercise in addition to 2 h of Physical Education classes per week. |
|
| ||||
| Aerobic (stage) pre-test mean (SD): 3.10 (0.9) | Aerobic (stage) pre-test mean (SD): 3.15 (1.14) | ||||||
| Anaerobic and aerobic fitness levels were significantly improved in both lean and obese children ( | |||||||
|
| 7 entails various PF activities (weeks 1–6) and indigenous games (weeks 7–12). |
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|
Curriculum | |||
| Total PA (min/week) pretest mean (SD): 91.0 (43.9) | Total PA (min/week) pretest mean (SD): 93.7 (52.2) | ||||||
| No significant difference between intervention and control groups at pre and post-test measurements ( | |||||||
|
| To improve healthy living habits of students |
|
|
Versatile program | |||
| School days, mean (SD): 11,371 (3306) | School days, mean (SD): 13,375 (3653) | ||||||
| Children were significantly more active in 2011 in comparison with 2009 ( | |||||||