Abstract

The promotion of physical activity and healthy eating to prevent obesity among youth is a pressing challenge. The current study examined the feasibility of community health workers (CHWs) conducting a physical activity (PA) and healthy eating intervention strategy with links to community supports and programs. Youth aged 10 - 18 years were recruited from three clinical sites serving inner-city families. Trained CHWs conducted assessment and counseling for PA and healthy eating among youth and their families and provided customized plans and navigation to neighborhood PA and nutrition programs. Measures of daily PA by self-report, weekday and weekend day sedentary behaviors, fruit and vegetable intake, avoidance of fatty foods, and avoidance of sugary drinks were assessed at baseline and follow-up. Twenty-five patients (mean age = 12.9 years) were exposed to ~9 months of intervention from baseline. Pre- and post-assessments revealed significant changes in reported PA, sedentary behaviors on weekdays, sedentary behaviors on weekend days, fruit and vegetable intake, avoidance of fatty foods, and avoidance of sugary drinks. Results demonstrated the feasibility of having CHWs effectively influenced the PA and eating behaviors of inner-city youth. Greater success was evident when assessment and counseling for PA and healthy eating were accompanied by navigation to neighborhood resources. The use of CHWs may be a cost-effective approach impacting the PA, sedentary, and dietary behaviors of youth.

Highlights

  • The important influence of physical activity (PA) on reducing the burden of chronic diseases and enhancing quality of life is well established [1] [2]

  • Diet and PA have been identified as risk factors for overweight, obesity, and type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) among children, adolescents, and adults [3]

  • Recommendations from the United States Preventive Services Task Force’s (USPSTF) Guide to Clinical Preventive Services, which includes recommendations for physical activity and dietary counseling [7], and the physical activity promotion recommendations from The Guide to Community Preventive Services [8] [9], along with evidence-based assessment and counseling protocols for youth, referred to as the Patient-centered Assessment and Counseling for Exercise Plus Nutrition materials (PACE+) [10]-[13] offer the substance of an integrated intervention approach

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The important influence of physical activity (PA) on reducing the burden of chronic diseases and enhancing quality of life is well established [1] [2]. We evaluated the feasibility and use of such evidence-based physical activity and dietary assessment and counseling protocols delivered among low-income, predominantly African-American and Latino pediatric patients (ages 10 - 17 years) attending local community health clinics through the use of locally recruited and trained community health workers (CHWs). It was hypothesized that the combined evidence-based clinical (PACE+) and community-based interventions (local parks and recreation, faith-based, and community programs) would succeed in effectively promoting healthy eating and PA among an at-risk youth population when delivered through the use of trained CHWs

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call