Abstract

As a strategy for early childhood obesity prevention, a variety of dietary behavior and physical activity policies and guidelines published by leading health agencies and early childhood education and care (ECEC) licensing and accreditation bodies exist. Given the potential diversity in recommendations from these policies, this narrative review sought to synthesize, appraise and describe the various policies and guidelines made by organizational and professional bodies to highlight consistent recommendations and identify opportunities to strengthen such policies. An electronic bibliographic search of seven online databases and grey literature sources was undertaken. Records were included if they were policies or guidelines with specific recommendations addressing dietary behavior and/or physical activity practice implementation within the ECEC setting; included children aged >12 months and <6 years and were developed for high income countries. Recommended dietary behavior and physical activity policies and practices were synthesized into broad themes using the Analysis Grid for Environments Linked to Obesity framework, and the quality of included guidelines appraised. Our search identified 38 eligible publications mostly from the US and Australia. Identified guidelines were largely consistent in their recommendation and frequently addressed the physical and sociocultural environment and were well-aligned with research evidence. Broader consideration of policy and economic environments may be needed to increase the impact of such policies and guidelines within the ECEC setting.

Highlights

  • Childhood overweight and obesity is increasingly prevalent, and if global trends continue, will affect up to 70 million infants and young children by the year 2025 [1].Childhood obesity is defined by an excess of body fatness that is widely categorized according to body mass index scores adjusted for child sex and age [2]

  • Given the wide variation in cultural, social, ecological and political contexts internationally [20,23], this review focused on both regional and national guidelines from countries ranked within the OECD top 20 countries for highest average annual incomes for 2019 [24]

  • The electronic database, online guideline database and grey literature searches resulted in a total of

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood overweight and obesity is increasingly prevalent, and if global trends continue, will affect up to 70 million infants and young children by the year 2025 [1]. Childhood obesity is defined by an excess of body fatness that is widely categorized according to body mass index scores adjusted for child sex and age [2]. Given that childhood obesity can track throughout the lifespan and influence lifelong health trajectories [3], it has.

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