4.7 Article

A Mixed-Method Evaluation of a Rural Elementary School Implementing the Coordinated Approach to Child Health (CATCH) Program

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15122729

Keywords

rural populations; health promotion; childhood obesity; overweight prevention; body mass index; physical fitness; school-based intervention; qualitative data

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Children in rural areas of the US are more likely to be affected by obesity than those in urban areas, but evidence-based programs in rural schools are rare. A study collected quantitative and qualitative data to evaluate the outcomes and perceptions of a program aimed at reducing obesity in racially and ethnically diverse students. The study found promising results, with decreases in BMI scores and obesity prevalence among certain groups of students, and positive perceptions of the program.
Despite children living in rural US areas having 26% greater odds of being affected by obesity compared to those living in urban areas, the implementation of evidence-based programs in rural schools is rare. We collected quantitative data (weight and height) from 272 racially and ethnically diverse students at baseline, and qualitative data from students (4 focus groups), parents, and school staff (16 semi-structured interviews and 29 surveys) to evaluate program outcomes and perceptions. At the 2-year follow-up, paired data from 157 students, represented by racial/ethnic groups of 59% non-Hispanic White, 31% non-Hispanic Black, and 10% Hispanic, showed an overall mean change (SD) in BMI z-score of -0.04 (0.59), a decrease of -0.08 (0.69) in boys, and a significant -0.18 (0.33) decrease among Hispanic students. Boys had a mean decrease in obesity prevalence of 3 percentage points (from 17% to 14%), and Hispanic students had the largest mean decrease in BMI percentile. Qualitative data showed positive perceptions of the CATCH program and its implementation. This community-engaged research, with collaboration from an academic institution, a health department, a local wellness coalition, and a rural elementary school, demonstrated successful CATCH program implementation and showed promising outcomes in mean BMI changes.

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