4.5 Article

App based education programme to reduce salt intake (AppSalt) in schoolchildren and their families in China: parallel, cluster-randomised controlled trial

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BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL
卷 376, 期 -, 页码 -

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BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmj-2021-066982

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  1. UK National Institute for Health Research [16/136/77]

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The smartphone application based education programme, using a child-to-parent approach, was effective in reducing salt intake and systolic blood pressure in adults, but the effects were not significant in children.
OBJECTIVE To determine whether a smartphone application based education programme can lower salt intake in schoolchildren and their families. DESIGN Parallel, cluster randomised controlled trial, with schools randomly assigned to either intervention or control group (1:1). SETTING 54 primary schools from three provinces in northern, central, and southern China, from 15 September 2018 to 27 December 2019. PARTICIPANTS 592 children (308 (52.0%) boys; mean age 8.58 (standard deviation 0.41) years) in grade 3 of primary school (about 11 children per school) and 1184 adult family members (551 (46.5%) men; mean age 45.80 (12.87) years). INTERVENTION Children in the intervention group were taught, with support of the app, about salt reduction and assigned homework to encourage their families to participate in activities to reduce salt consumption. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Primary outcome was the difference in salt intake change (measured by 24 hour urinary sodium excretion) at 12 month follow-up, between the intervention and control groups. RESULTS After baseline assessment, 297 children and 594 adult family members (from 27 schools) were allocated to the intervention group, and 295 children and 590 adult family members (from 27 schools) were allocated to the control group. During the trial, 27 (4.6%) children and 112 (9.5%) adults were lost to follow-up, owing to children having moved to another school or adults unable to attend follow-up assessments. The remaining 287 children and 546 adults (from 27 schools) in the intervention group and 278 children and 526 adults (from 27 schools) in the control group completed the 12 month follow-up assessment. Mean salt intake at baseline was 5.5 g/day (standard deviation 1.9) in children and 10.0 g/day (3.5) in adults in the intervention group, and 5.6 g/day (2.1) in children and 10.0 g/day (3.6) in adults in the control group. During the study, salt intake of the children increased in both intervention and control groups but to a lesser extent in the intervention group (mean effect of intervention after adjusting for confounding factors -0.25 g/day, 95% confidence interval -0.61 to 0.12, P=0.18). In adults, salt intake decreased in both intervention and control groups but to a greater extent in the intervention group (mean effect -0.82 g/day, -1.24 to -0.40, P<0.001). The mean effect on systolic blood pressure was -0.76 mm Hg (-2.37 to 0.86, P=0.36) in children and -1.64 mm Hg (-3.01 to -0.27, P=0.02) in adults. CONCLUSIONS The app based education programme delivered through primary school, using a child-to-parent approach, was effective in lowering salt intake and systolic blood pressure in adults, but the effects were not significant in children. Although this novel approach could potentially be scaled up to larger populations, the programme needs further strengthening to reduce salt intake across the whole population, including schoolchildren.

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