The importance of long-term follow-up in child and adolescent obesity prevention interventions

Abstract Pediatric overweight and obesity continues to be a major public health concern. Once established it is difficult to treat; therefore well-designed and evaluated prevention interventions are vitally important. There is considerable evidence to suggest that obesity prevention initiatives can...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of pediatric obesity 2011-08, Vol.6 (3-4), p.178-181
Hauptverfasser: Jones, Rachel A., Sinn, Natalie, Campbell, Karen J., Hesketh, Kylie, Denney-Wilson, Elizabeth, Morgan, Philip J., Lubans, David R., Magarey, Anthea
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container_end_page 181
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 178
container_title International journal of pediatric obesity
container_volume 6
creator Jones, Rachel A.
Sinn, Natalie
Campbell, Karen J.
Hesketh, Kylie
Denney-Wilson, Elizabeth
Morgan, Philip J.
Lubans, David R.
Magarey, Anthea
description Abstract Pediatric overweight and obesity continues to be a major public health concern. Once established it is difficult to treat; therefore well-designed and evaluated prevention interventions are vitally important. There is considerable evidence to suggest that obesity prevention initiatives can change children's behaviours and weight status over the short- or medium-term; however, there is far less evidence on which to judge the impact over the longer term. In response to the rise in short- and medium-term obesity prevention studies for children and adolescents over recent years, the Prevention Stream of the Australasian Child and Adolescent Obesity Research Network highlight five points as to why the dearth of obesity prevention studies with long-term follow-up should be urgently addressed. Furthermore, recommendations to strengthen the evidence base and outline key implications for research design in this area and the support required for long-term follow-up studies are detailed.
doi_str_mv 10.3109/17477166.2011.575155
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Body Weight
Child
Child Behavior
Children
Evidence-Based Medicine - methods
follow-up
Health Behavior
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
intervention
Obesity - etiology
Obesity - physiopathology
Obesity - prevention & control
Obesity - psychology
obesity prevention
overweight
Research Design
Risk Reduction Behavior
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
title The importance of long-term follow-up in child and adolescent obesity prevention interventions
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