Empowerment Approaches in Childhood Weight Management: A Systematic Review

Empowerment interventions facilitate individuals, organizations, and communities to gain better control over their health. They are distinctly different from traditional behavior change models and encourage participants to set their own health priorities and agenda. Current evidence suggests empower...

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Veröffentlicht in:Childhood obesity 2022-01, Vol.18 (1), p.2-30
Hauptverfasser: Earle, Renae, Littlewood, Robyn, Nalatu, Simone, Walker, Jacqueline
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container_title Childhood obesity
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creator Earle, Renae
Littlewood, Robyn
Nalatu, Simone
Walker, Jacqueline
description Empowerment interventions facilitate individuals, organizations, and communities to gain better control over their health. They are distinctly different from traditional behavior change models and encourage participants to set their own health priorities and agenda. Current evidence suggests empowerment interventions are efficacious for smoking, sexual, and mental health outcomes. However, empowerment in childhood obesity (which remains a global public health challenge) is underresearched. This review systematically analyzed the evidence for empowerment approaches in childhood weight management. The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines were followed. A search strategy was applied to six databases from inception to May 25, 2021. Evidence was appraised using The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Quality Criteria Checklist and National Health and Medical Research Council Levels of Evidence. Of the 9274 articles identified, 29 articles describing 14 programs met the inclusion criteria. Twenty-five studies rated positive and four rated neutral. Overall, the evidence body rated "B." Seventy-two percent of the 3318 participants were from priority populations, highlighting the unique ability of empowerment interventions to engage those most in need. Results demonstrate small to large improvements in participant body mass index with effect sizes ranging from 0.08 to 1.13. Throughout the literature, empowerment was measured inconsistently and usually with a surrogate marker. All studies were set in America or Canada. This review suggests empowerment should be further investigated in childhood weight management. Empowerment interventions represent a unique opportunity to meaningfully integrate self-determination to clinical childhood weight management practice and overcome current barriers related to priority population engagement.
doi_str_mv 10.1089/chi.2021.0049
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subjects Body Mass Index
Canada
Child
Childhood
Confidence
Empowerment
Health behavior
Health promotion
Health Status
Humans
Intervention
Mental disorders
Mental health
Nutrition Therapy
Obesity
Overweight
Pediatric Obesity - prevention & control
Prevention
Skills
Weight control
title Empowerment Approaches in Childhood Weight Management: A Systematic Review
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