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Interventions of Childhood Obesity

Introduction and Background
Childhood obesity affects 17% of children in the United States (Whooten et al., 2018). It is well understood that many social determinants contribute to the manifestation and improvement of this disease.
Purpose Statement
I aim to compare the impact of increased health education through medical professional to families and obese/overweight children compared to implemented physical activity in social and personal settings on BMI improvement among the obese/overweight children.
Literature Review
Searches performed through the Sherrod Library data base at East Tennessee State University included the following key words: social determinants, long-term study, physical activity, clinical, community and family. Research was not limited to the United States population.
Findings
Review of these studies showed marked improvement in BMI for physical activity programs in association with schools. These activities resulted in BMI z-score improvements of -0.22, when 60 minutes of physical activity was implemented 3-day/week prior to school (Whooten et al., 2018). Studies surrounding medical counseling and education alone reported minimal improvements to BMI and limited sustainable of these results at follow-up. However, frequent routine meeting with medical profession and obese children and their family resulted in increased Pediatric Quality of Life scores.
Conclusions
While implantation of multiple discipline may be required to improved BMI in obese/overweight children, physical activity in the public social setting shows to be promising compared to increased education and counseling from medical professionals alone in reducing BMI.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ETSU/oai:dc.etsu.edu:es-conf-1056
Date14 April 2022
CreatorsMattox, Scott
PublisherDigital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
Source SetsEast Tennessee State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceEpsilon Sigma at-Large Research Conference

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