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Results of Public Health Prevention Interventions Harold W. Kohl, III, Ph.D. ILSI Center for Health Promotion Atlanta, GA USA Changes in prevalence of adult obesity among adult men, 7 countries. Percent Popkin and Doak, 1998
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Results of Public Health Prevention Interventions Harold W. Kohl, III, Ph.D. ILSI Center for Health Promotion Atlanta, GA USA
Changes in prevalence of adult obesity among adult men, 7 countries. Percent Popkin and Doak, 1998
Changes in prevalence of adult obesity among adult women, 7 countries. Percent Popkin and Doak, 1998
Public health prevention of diabetes and obesity • What are we preventing/promoting? • When do we want to prevent/promote it? • In which settings should we put our efforts?
Public health prevention of obesity • Childhood/adolescence • overweight • obesity Prevention can mean treatment! • Adulthood • overweight • obesity
Public health prevention of type II diabetes • Childhood/adolescence • IFG • Diabetes Prevention can mean treatment! • Adulthood • IFG • Diabetes
Public health behavior promotion related to obesity and diabetes • Childhood/adolescence • Physical inactivity • Diet behaviors • Adulthood • Physical inactivity • Diet behaviors
Today’s goal • Attempt to summarize status of knowledge in areas of obesity and diabetes public health prevention interventions. • Provide framework for other experts on the panel as well as breakout groups. • Answer a few questions and raise more.
Summary of randomized, controlled studies on obesity (weight gain) prevention
Summary of observational studies on obesity (weight gain) prevention Cross-sectional studies suggest lower weights at higher levels of physical activity and diet ‘quality’ indicators. Longitudinal studies (n = 12) suggest an attenuation of weight gain at higher levels of physical activity. Change analyses suggest a lower risk of becoming overweight with an increase in activity
Mean weight change by cardiovascular fitness changes, ACLS, 1970-1994 Weight Change (kg) n=4,599 men and 724 women Mean time between fitness evaluations: 1.8 y Mean time of follow-up: 7.5 y Dipietro, et al, 1998
Summary of randomized, controlled studies on Type II diabetes prevention Diabetes Prevention Program (n>3,000) Diabetes Care 1999;22:623-634. Finnish Diabetes Prevention Study (n=523) Br. J. Nutrition 2000;83( Suppl. 1), s137-s142 Da Qing IGT and Diabetes Study (n=577) Diabetes Care 1997;537-544.
Summary of trials on diabetes prevention • All start with initial population with IFG. • Early work suggested possibility, but non-optimal study designs limited interpretation. • 2 current studies investigating solely ‘hygienic’ interventions. • Results of randomized, controlled trials suggest positive outcomes, incidence reductions of up to 30% may be possible.
Six-year incidence of diabetes by treatment condition and body composition: Da Qing China Percent Xiao-ren Pan, et al, 1997
Potential settings for health behavior interventions for children and adults School Community Provider Family
School-based interventions • Some have focused on obese or high-risk children (with physiologic outcomes) while most have included the entire school (behavioral outcomes) • Most have been multi-component interventions – behavioral, environmental, educational – and various risk factors • Short term results – implications for adult outcomes are unknown.
School-based interventions • Targeted interventions produce short-term weight loss. • Overweight children • Populations ‘at-risk’ • Curriculum and environmental changes are possible. • Changes in physical activity (PE) and food service policies are achievable as are short term changes in comprehension
School-based interventions • Varying “success”: changes in body composition measures not likely to follow changes in knowledge or behavior. • No approach has been tested across several ages or grades. • Few attempts for home-support of school intervention.
Community based interventions • Stanford Three-Community • Stanford Five-City • Minnesota Heart Health Program • Pawtucket Heart Health Program • North Karelia Project • Mauritius • Despite positive risk factor changes, no evidence of obesity-related treatment effects in 4 of 6 studies
Community based interventions • Pound of Prevention (only community-based study designed to prevent weight gain). • 1200 volunteers randomized to no-contact control, and education (with and without readership incentives) combined with intervention activities. • 3 year intervention • All three groups gained weight • Education alone appears insufficient on the community level. Jeffrey and French, 1999
Current Recommendations Children should accumulate 30-60 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity each day
The Program • A classroom-based physical activity promotion program designed to reduce periods of inactivity during school day for elementary school children.
The Program • Integrates 10 minute periods of physical activity into school day combined with age-appropriate lessons of math, science, language arts, etc.
The Materials • Physical activity cards are linked to core academic objectives • Teacher manual coordinates the lessons • TAKE 10!™ Tracking Poster motivates kids • Teacher Training Video explains the program