200 likes | 319 Views
Policy Options for Physical Activity in Schools Background Document. Claire LeBlanc MD, FRCPC June 6, 2007. Outline. Background Methodology review of literature Policy Options Roles of Stakeholders Evaluation Next Steps. Global Obesity Epidemic 1.
E N D
Policy Options for Physical Activity in SchoolsBackground Document Claire LeBlanc MD, FRCPC June 6, 2007
Outline • Background • Methodology • review of literature • Policy Options • Roles of Stakeholders • Evaluation • Next Steps
Global Obesity Epidemic1 • More than 400 million adults were obese in 2005 worldwide • Chronic diseases 2° to obesity account for 60% of the 58 million deaths/year2 • cardiovascular disease, diabetes, some cancers, chronic respiratory diseases 1http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs311/en/index.html; 2 Preventing Chronic Diseases: a Vital Investment: Geneva, World Health Organization 2005
Children not Immune3 • ≥ 20 million children under five years old were overweight globally in 20051 • Childhood obesity associated with many co-morbidities • type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, obstructive sleep apnea, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, poor self-esteem, and lower health-related quality of life • Up to 80% of obese youth continue this trend into adulthood increasing their risk for chronic disease and premature mortality 3 LeBlanc CMA, Gomez J et al. Pediatrics ,2006;117:1834-1842
Why are Kids Overweight? • Excessive caloric intake • Excessive sedentary activity4 • 6-11yo > 2hr TV/d: 2x as likely obese • > 30 hr/wk screen time 35% youth overweight vs 23% if less screen time • Inadequate physical activity levels5 • Canadian 5-17 year olds take an average of 11,356 steps/day (pedometer) = insufficient activity for optimal growth & development (need 12,000 -16,500 steps/day ~ 90 min mod-vigorous PA/day) 4 Shields M. Statistics Canada 2005; 82-620-MWE; 5 CANPLAY: Physical Activity Monitor 2005. www.cflri.ca/eng/statistics/surveys/pam2005.php
Why Not Active Enough? • PA DAILY at home • time pressures • TV, computer, video games preferred • unsafe environments • inactive parents • recreational facilities • PA DAILY at school • 17% Canadian schools (Elementary High) have daily PE by PE specialists6 • 7% 4x/wk; 25% 3x/wk; 36% 2x/wk; 12% 1x/wk • PE optional in most secondary schools7 6 Cameron C. Opportunities for PA in Canadian Schools: Trends from 2001-2006. www.cflri.ca 7 Janzen H. Physical and Health Education 2004;4-12 (CAHPERD Scholar Address)
One Solution: School Wellness Policies • Quality health education • Promote healthy foods • Encourage physical activity (PA) & PE • quality daily PE • active lunch & recess • active transportation • activity in classroom • energizers • CLASS • intramural sports • activities before & after school • interschool sports • “making the team”
Methodology • Review of literature to 2005 • many effective school-based research programs that improved student PA levels, fitness scores & obesity measures7 • A second review from 2005-2007 • MEDLINE, Pubmed, HealthSTAR, CINAHL, Eric & PsychInfo • Supplemental resources • WHO Information Series on School Health (www.who.int/schoolyouthhealth) • 2006 WHO Regional Office for Europe’s Health Evidence Network Report on School Health Promotion (www.euro.wo.int/document/e88185.pdf) • Challenge of Obesity in the WHO European Region and the Strategies for Response Summary (www.euro.who.int/pubrequest) • Healthy Child Manitoba (www.gov.mb.ca/healthychild/index.html) • Washington State Department of Health Report on Nutrition and Physical Activity – A Policy Resource Guide (www.doh.wa.gov/cfh/steps/publications/nutrition_activity_policy_guide_final.pdf pages 52-57 • Action Schools! BC (www.actionschoolsbc.ca) • Annapolis Valley Health Promoting Schools Initiative (www.hpclearinghouse.ca/features/AVHPSP.pdf) 7Attachment 1: CMAJ 2007;176(8):chapter 22
(2) Untested Promising Policy Options for Physical Activity in Schools
Potential Barriers/Solutions for Stakeholders: Health Professionals CPS: Are We Doing Enough?A status report on Canadian public policy and child and youth health CASM, AAP & CPS position papers; CPS tool kit Advocacy: Government Measures of obesity + co-morbid conditions; No time for preventive counseling; Remuneration AAP (POSH study) CDC Funded Advocacy: media Unaware school health role CPS/AAP media training Student Pediatricians lack training Hospital environment not healthy “role model” CPS HAL Residency Module CPS & CAPHC: HAL Hospital AAP = American Academy of Pediatrics; CPS = Canadian Pediatric Society; HAL = Healthy Active Living CASM = Canadian Academy of Sport Medicine; CAPHC = Canadian Association Pediatric Hospital Centers Barrier Solution
How do We know the Policy is Working? Process Indicators Expert Advisory Committee Output Indicators Safe Cycling Routes Outcome Indicators ↑ Student PA Levels ↓ Student BMI
WHO Framework: Monitoring and Evaluation of Policies 8 8 Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health. A Framework to Monitor and Evaluate Implementation. World Health Organization Geneva, 2006
(4)Process and Output Indicators for Effective & Promising Policy Options for Physical Activity in Schools
(5) Outcome Indicators(children) for Effective & Promising Policy Options for Physical Activity in Schools
Conclusion • Physical inactivity is an important determinant of obesity and associated chronic disease in children and youth • Health Promoting Schools are a key strategy to improve the health and wellness of children
Next Steps • Francois Lagarde & Claire LeBlanc • finalize background paper based on feedback gathered from Satellite Expert Roundtable on WHO Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity & Health: A School Policy Framework • Satellite Expert Roundtable • draft outline for DPAS School Policy Framework • World Health Organization • develop DPAS School Policy Framework • organize consultation process • launch School Policy Framework once finalized