Abstract

Multi-level multi-component (MLMC) strategies have been recommended to prevent and reduce childhood obesity, but results of such trials have been mixed. The present work discusses lessons learned from three recently completed MLMC interventions to inform future research and policy addressing childhood obesity. B’more Healthy Communities for Kids (BHCK), Children’s Healthy Living (CHL), and Health and Local Community (SoL) trials had distinct cultural contexts, global regions, and study designs, but intervened at multiple levels of the socioecological model with strategies that address multiple components of complex food and physical activity environments to prevent childhood obesity. We discuss four common themes: (i) How to engage with community partners and involve them in development of intervention and study design; (ii) build and maintain intervention intensity by creating mutual promotion and reinforcement of the intervention activities across the multiple levels and components; (iii) conduct process evaluation for monitoring, midcourse corrections, and to engage stakeholder groups; and (iv) sustaining MLMC interventions and its effect by developing enduring and systems focused collaborations. The paper expands on each of these themes with specific lessons learned and presents future directions for MLMC trials.

Highlights

  • Multi-level multi-component (MLMC) interventions are increasingly being tested as a means of addressing childhood obesity

  • MLMC interventions are thought to be more effective than single component interventions, because it is suggested that reaching children and their caregivers in different complementary settings, and with policy, will be more likely to impact the choices that people have, what they choose to do and child obesity [1]

  • All three MLMC interventions were grounded in ecological systems theory and applied the social ecological model to the design and implementation of the interventions

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Summary

Introduction

Multi-level multi-component (MLMC) interventions are increasingly being tested as a means of addressing childhood obesity. MLMC interventions are thought to be more effective than single component interventions (e.g., schools only), because it is suggested that reaching children and their caregivers in different complementary settings, and with policy, will be more likely to impact the choices that people have (environmental change), what they choose to do (behavior) and child obesity [1]. Previous reviews of the literature on multi-level multi-component obesity intervention programs using community-wide or population-based (or “whole-of-community”) approaches have reported positive but small effects on childhood obesity [2,3]. A systematic review of eight MLMC interventions found that seven reported a positive statistically significant effect on child obesity, and their meta-analysis reported a modest mean change in body mass index (BMI) z-score of −0.09 among. Public Health 2019, 16, 30; doi:10.3390/ijerph16010030 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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