4.6 Article

NYC FITNESSGRAM: Population-Level Physical Fitness Surveillance for New York City Youth

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 192, Issue 3, Pages 334-341

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwac204

Keywords

children; fitness; schools; surveillance; youth

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NYC FITNESSGRAM is a surveillance program for monitoring the physical fitness of public school students in New York City, initiated in 2006. It uses fitness composite percentile scores and Healthy Fitness Zones to estimate prevalence and trends in youth physical fitness. The results highlight disparities in fitness prevalence among NYC students and provide a population-scale tracking of shifts in youth fitness. Overall, NYC FITNESSGRAM contributes to the promotion of global public health by serving as a surveillance tool.
NYC FITNESSGRAM, monitored by the New York City (NYC) Department of Education and the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, functions as the NYC Department of Education's citywide youth fitness surveillance program. Here we present the methods, characteristics, and data used in this surveillance system to monitor physical fitness in public school students (grades kindergarten through 12; initiated in 2006; n = 6,748,265 observations; mean sample of 519,097 observations per year to date) in New York, New York. Youth physical fitness prevalence estimates, longitudinal trends, and spatial analyses may be investigated using continuous fitness composite percentile scores and Cooper Institute for Aerobic Research-defined sex- and age-specific Healthy Fitness Zones. Healthy Fitness Zones are based on individual-child fitness test performance, with standard errors clustered at the school and student levels and adjusted for sociodemographic characteristics. Results may be used to show trends in youth fitness attainment over time and highlight disparities in the fitness prevalence of NYC students. In sum, continuous fitness composite percentile scores offer the opportunity for prospective tracking of shifts in youth physical fitness on a population scale and across subpopulations. NYC FITNESSGRAM can accompany a growing body of surveillance tools demonstrating the potential for population-level surveillance tools to promote global public health.

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