Abstract

Obesity is a major public health concern and there are increasing calls for policy intervention. As obesity and the related health conditions develop during childhood, schools are being seen as important locations for obesity prevention, including multifaceted interventions incorporating policy elements. The objective of this systematic review was to evaluate the effects of policies related to diet and physical activity in schools, either alone, or as part of an intervention programme on the weight status of children aged 4 to 11 years. A comprehensive and systematic search of medical, education, exercise science, and social science databases identified 21 studies which met the inclusion criteria. There were no date, location or language restrictions. The identified studies evaluated a range of either, or both, diet and physical activity related policies, or intervention programmes including such policies, using a variety of observational and experimental designs. The policies were clustered into those which sought to affect diet, those which sought to affect physical activity and those which sought to affect both diet and physical activity to undertake random effects meta-analysis. Within the diet cluster, studies of the United States of America National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs were analysed separately; however there was significant heterogeneity in the pooled results. The pooled effects of the physical activity, and other diet related policies on BMI-SDS were non-significant. The multifaceted interventions tended to include policy elements related to both diet and physical activity (combined cluster), and although these interventions were too varied to pool their results, significant reductions in weight-related outcomes were demonstrated. The evidence from this review suggests that, when implemented alone, school diet and physical activity related policies appear insufficient to prevent or treat overweight or obesity in children, however, they do appear to have an effect when developed and implemented as part of a more extensive intervention programme. Additional evidence is required before recommendations regarding the focus of policies can be made and therefore, increased effort should be made to evaluate the effect of policies and policy containing intervention programmes upon weight status.

Highlights

  • Obesity among children is associated with significant psychological, social and health consequences including insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, low self-esteem and poorer education and employment outcomes [1,2]

  • The evidence from this systematic review suggests that diet and physical activity related policies need to be located within more complex approaches to preventing childhood obesity which focus on multiple factors and at multiple levels of influence as advocated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines [10]

  • No policies which guided choice through disincentives, or eliminated choice were identified during the review, which may be pertinent as these policy actions have been effectively employed in campaigns to reduce the prevalence of smoking [7]

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Summary

Introduction

Obesity among children is associated with significant psychological, social and health consequences including insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, low self-esteem and poorer education and employment outcomes [1,2]. To date the systematic reviews which have examined the effect of obesity related school policies have evaluated diet and physical activity outcomes rather than weight status [11,12,13,14,15,16]. Jaime and Lock [11] and Van Cauwenberghe [14] identified policy components which appear to have a positive effect upon diet, including: nutrition guidelines; healthy food price interventions and fruit and vegetable distribution or subscription schemes. They found a lack of evidence for policies affecting children’s breakfast or unhealthy food choices [11,14]. This paper extends existing work by systematically reviewing the evidence for the effect of diet and physical activity policies on children’s weight status [11,14,15,16]

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