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A systematic review of how researchers characterize the school environment in determining its effect on student obesity

A systematic review of how researchers characterize the school environment in determining its effect on student obesity
A systematic review of how researchers characterize the school environment in determining its effect on student obesity

Background: obesity in early childhood is a robust predictor of obesity later in life. Schools provide unparalleled access to children and have subsequently become major intervention sites. However, empirical evidence supporting the effectiveness of school-based interventions against childhood obesity is of limited scope and unknown quality. The aim of this systematic review is to critically assess how researchers have characterized the school environment in determining its effect on childhood weight status in order to improve the quality and consistency of research in this area. We conducted a narrative review with a systematic search of the literature in line with PRISMA guidelines (2009). Original peer-reviewed research articles in English were searched from Medline, EMBASE, CENTRAL, CINAHL and PsycINFO databases from earliest record to January 2014. We included empirical research that reported at least one measure of the primary/elementary school environment and its relationship with at least one objective adiposity-related variable for students aged 4-12 years. Two authors independently extracted data on study design, school-level factors, student weight status, type of analysis and effect.

Results: five studies met the inclusion criteria. Each study targeted different parts of the school environment and findings across the studies were not comparable. The instruments used to collect school-level data report no validity or reliability testing.

Conclusions: our review shows that researchers have used instruments of unknown quality to test if the school environment is a determinant of childhood obesity, which raises broader questions about the impact that schools can play in obesity prevention.

2052-9538
Turner, Kyle
88a2a5ed-a64b-4092-a2ba-466d191ebae1
Foster, Charlie
b146fe67-aa53-4282-aa98-452933607efa
Allender, Steven
d9a88104-3c81-4e82-ab15-1cd0c6838d7d
Plugge, Emma
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35
Turner, Kyle
88a2a5ed-a64b-4092-a2ba-466d191ebae1
Foster, Charlie
b146fe67-aa53-4282-aa98-452933607efa
Allender, Steven
d9a88104-3c81-4e82-ab15-1cd0c6838d7d
Plugge, Emma
b64d2086-6cf2-4fae-98bf-6aafa3115b35

Turner, Kyle, Foster, Charlie, Allender, Steven and Plugge, Emma (2015) A systematic review of how researchers characterize the school environment in determining its effect on student obesity. BMC Obesity, 2, [13]. (doi:10.1186/s40608-015-0045-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: obesity in early childhood is a robust predictor of obesity later in life. Schools provide unparalleled access to children and have subsequently become major intervention sites. However, empirical evidence supporting the effectiveness of school-based interventions against childhood obesity is of limited scope and unknown quality. The aim of this systematic review is to critically assess how researchers have characterized the school environment in determining its effect on childhood weight status in order to improve the quality and consistency of research in this area. We conducted a narrative review with a systematic search of the literature in line with PRISMA guidelines (2009). Original peer-reviewed research articles in English were searched from Medline, EMBASE, CENTRAL, CINAHL and PsycINFO databases from earliest record to January 2014. We included empirical research that reported at least one measure of the primary/elementary school environment and its relationship with at least one objective adiposity-related variable for students aged 4-12 years. Two authors independently extracted data on study design, school-level factors, student weight status, type of analysis and effect.

Results: five studies met the inclusion criteria. Each study targeted different parts of the school environment and findings across the studies were not comparable. The instruments used to collect school-level data report no validity or reliability testing.

Conclusions: our review shows that researchers have used instruments of unknown quality to test if the school environment is a determinant of childhood obesity, which raises broader questions about the impact that schools can play in obesity prevention.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 19 February 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 March 2015

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485278
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485278
ISSN: 2052-9538
PURE UUID: cd9812da-807d-4ead-9a0a-8c1e3b796956
ORCID for Emma Plugge: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8359-0071

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Date deposited: 01 Dec 2023 17:59
Last modified: 12 Jul 2024 02:06

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Contributors

Author: Kyle Turner
Author: Charlie Foster
Author: Steven Allender
Author: Emma Plugge ORCID iD

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