4.7 Article

A Natural Experiment Comparing the Effectiveness of the Healthy Eagles Child Weight Management Intervention in School Versus Community Settings

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13113912

Keywords

childhood obesity; weight management; children; behavioural weight management interventions

Funding

  1. NIHR Oxford Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) - Canadian Institutes of Health Research Postdoctoral Fellowship [RN439810, 459061]
  2. NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre
  3. NIHR Oxford Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) - Croydon Council

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Behavioral weight management interventions like the Healthy Eagles program show small but significant benefits in reducing BMI z-scores in children, with a more pronounced effect seen in school settings compared to community settings. Particularly, participants with severe obesity and those from Black ethnic backgrounds and higher deprivation levels experienced greater reductions in BMI z-scores. Limited changes were observed in nutrition and physical activity behaviors across both settings.
Behavioural weight management interventions are recommended for the treatment of obesity in children. However, the evidence for these is limited and often generated under trial conditions with White, middle-class populations. Healthy Eagles is a behavioural weight management intervention designed to treat excess weight in children. It ran in the London Borough of Croydon from 2017 to 2020 and was delivered in both school and community settings, providing a natural experiment to compare outcomes. A total of 1560 participants started the Healthy Eagles programme; 347 were in the community setting and 703 in the school setting. Data were analysed for those who completed 70% of the programme. In the school setting, there was a small but significant reduction in BMI z-score (M = -0.04, 95% CI = -0.08, -0.01) for participants above a healthy weight, especially in those with severe obesity (M = -0.09, 95% CI = -0.15, -0.03); there was no significant change in any subgroup in the community setting. Linear regression analysis showed the school setting was associated with a 0.26 (95% CI = 0.13, 0.49) greater reduction in BMI z-score than the community setting after adjusting for ethnicity, deprivation, age and gender. Across both programmes, the effect was somewhat greater in participants from a Black (African/Caribbean/Other) ethnic background (M = -0.06, 95% CI = -0.09, -0.02) and from the two most deprived quintiles (M = -0.06, 95% CI = -0.11, -0.01). Data were limited, but minimal changes were measured in nutrition and physical activity behaviours regardless of setting. This evaluation provides indirect evidence of a small but significant benefit to running weight management interventions in a school versus community setting.

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