The built environment and child obesity: A review of Australian policies

Summary Child obesity is a serious public health challenge affected by both individual choice and societal and environmental factors. The main modifiable risk factors for child obesity are unhealthy eating and low levels of physical activity, both influenced by aspects of the built environment. Coor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Obesity reviews 2024-01, Vol.25 (1), p.e13650-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Henry, Anna, Fried, Leanne, Nathan, Andrea, Dhamrait, Gursimran, Boruff, Bryan, Schipperijn, Jasper, Cross, Donna, Beck, Ben, Trapp, Gina, Christian, Hayley
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container_issue 1
container_start_page e13650
container_title Obesity reviews
container_volume 25
creator Henry, Anna
Fried, Leanne
Nathan, Andrea
Dhamrait, Gursimran
Boruff, Bryan
Schipperijn, Jasper
Cross, Donna
Beck, Ben
Trapp, Gina
Christian, Hayley
description Summary Child obesity is a serious public health challenge affected by both individual choice and societal and environmental factors. The main modifiable risk factors for child obesity are unhealthy eating and low levels of physical activity, both influenced by aspects of the built environment. Coordinated government policy across jurisdictions, developed using strong research evidence, can enable built environments that better support healthy lifestyles. This study reviewed current Australian and Western Australian government policies to understand if and how they address the impact of the built environment on child obesity, physical activity, sedentary behavior, and diet. Current government policy documents related to the built environment and child health were analyzed using the Comprehensive Analysis of Policy on Physical Activity framework. Ten Australian and 31 Western Australian government policy documents were identified. Most referred to the role of the built environment in supporting physical activity. Very few policies mentioned the built environment's role in reducing sedentary behaviors, supporting healthy eating, and addressing obesity. Few recognized the needs of children, and none mentioned children in policy development. Future government policy development should include the voices of children and child‐specific built environment features. Inter‐organizational policies with transparent implementation and evaluation plans are recommended.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/obr.13650
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The main modifiable risk factors for child obesity are unhealthy eating and low levels of physical activity, both influenced by aspects of the built environment. Coordinated government policy across jurisdictions, developed using strong research evidence, can enable built environments that better support healthy lifestyles. This study reviewed current Australian and Western Australian government policies to understand if and how they address the impact of the built environment on child obesity, physical activity, sedentary behavior, and diet. Current government policy documents related to the built environment and child health were analyzed using the Comprehensive Analysis of Policy on Physical Activity framework. Ten Australian and 31 Western Australian government policy documents were identified. Most referred to the role of the built environment in supporting physical activity. 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Very few policies mentioned the built environment's role in reducing sedentary behaviors, supporting healthy eating, and addressing obesity. Few recognized the needs of children, and none mentioned children in policy development. Future government policy development should include the voices of children and child‐specific built environment features. 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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Australia
Built Environment
child
Children
Children & youth
Documents
Eating
Eating behavior
Environmental factors
Exercise
Government policy
Health care
healthy eating
Humans
Obesity
Organizational policy
Pediatric Obesity - epidemiology
Pediatric Obesity - etiology
Pediatric Obesity - prevention & control
Physical activity
Policy
Public health
Public policy
Review
REVIEWS
Risk factors
Sedentary behavior
Urban environments
title The built environment and child obesity: A review of Australian policies
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