Abstract

BackgroundSchools are a key setting for large-scale primordial non-communicable disease prevention in young people, but little data on sustainability of impacts on cardiometabolic risk markers is available.MethodsSix and a half year follow-up of a natural experiment. In 2008, six public schools in the municipality of Svendborg (Denmark) augmented their curricular physical education (intervention) and four matched schools served as controls. At long term follow up in 2015 n = 312 participants aged 5–11 years had complete data (33% of children providing necessary baseline data). The intervention, that consisted of a trebling of weekly physical education lessons and courses provided to physical education teachers, was provided at intervention schools up until 6th grade. Participants attended 6th to 10th grade at follow-up. Differences in the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance, blood pressure, triglycerides, cholesterol ratios, cardiorespiratory fitness, waist-circumference, and a composite score of these, between participants attending intervention and control schools were analysed by mixed linear regression models. Differences in physical activity at follow-up was analysed cross-sectionally (no baseline available) in n = 495.ResultsCompared to controls, children at intervention schools had a non-significant − 0.07 (− 0.32 to 0.18) standard deviations lower composite risk score 6.5 years after project initiation. Likewise, no statistically significant differences between intervention and control schools were found for any of the other outcomes (p-values ≥ 0.41). However, six of seven outcomes were in a direction favouring intervention schools. No statistically significant differences between intervention and control schools were observed for physical activity outcomes (p-values ≥ 0.13).ConclusionsAn augmented physical activity program including 270 min of weekly physical education provided for three to seven years did not materialize in statistically significant differences in established risk markers in children from intervention compared to control schools. As the intervention was discontinued after 6th grade, the post-intervention effect of augmented physical education throughout adolescence is unknown. School-based physical activity programs may benefit from incorporating instruments for behaviour translation to leisure time in their intervention models to increase the probability of achieving public health relevance.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03510494.

Highlights

  • Schools are a key setting for large-scale primordial non-communicable disease prevention in young people, but little data on sustainability of impacts on cardiometabolic risk markers is available

  • This study reports long-term effects of the CHAMPS-study Childhood Health (DK) in 312 participants with 6. 5 years of follow-up

  • Indications of non-identical missingness characteristics between intervention and control schools were observed for family history of Noncommunicable disease (NCD) (p = 0.07), educational attainment of the mother or female legal guardian (p = 0.03), and pubertal development in 2012 (p = 0.02)

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Summary

Introduction

Schools are a key setting for large-scale primordial non-communicable disease prevention in young people, but little data on sustainability of impacts on cardiometabolic risk markers is available. Trends indicate that physical activity and cardiorespiratory fitness levels in young people may be declining [7,8,9] and possibly accelerated in low socioeconomic segments of society [9]. These trends are alarming as a lack of physical activity is a leading cause of premature mortality in the adult population [5] and physical activity levels track from childhood to adulthood [10]. Provision of additional physical education led by professionals could be a viable option for increasing physical activity levels of schoolaged children

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