A weight-management camp followed by weekly after-school lifestyle education sessions as an obesity intervention for Qatari children: a prospective cohort study
Author | Taylor, Michael James |
Author | Vlaev, Ivo |
Author | Taylor, David, 1958- |
Author | Gately, Gately |
Author | Ahmedna, Mohamed |
Author | Kerkadi, Abdelhamid |
Author | Lothian, Jackie |
Author | Alsaadi, Aziza |
Author | Al-Kuwari, Mohamed |
Author | Gholoum, Suhaila |
Author | Al-Kuwari, Hanan |
Author | Darzi, Ara |
Available date | 2016-11-16T09:11:56Z |
Publication Date | 2015-11-13 |
Publication Name | The Lancet - Public Health Science: A National Conference Dedicated to New Research in UK Public Health |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(15)00910-1 |
Citation | "A weight-management camp followed by weekly after-school lifestyle education sessions as an obesity intervention for Qatari children: a prospective cohort study", The Lancet - Public Health Science, Meeting Abstracts, P. p. 72 , Vol. 386 , issue S1-S83 , 2015 |
Abstract | Background Weight-management camp interventions for obese children are eff ective for short-term weight loss. However, there is little evidence indicating how gains made with such interventions can be maintained in the longer term. The present prospective cohort study investigated eff ectiveness of an intervention consisting of a weightmanagement camp followed by weekly lifestyle education sessions. Methods Obese children from eight Qatari schools participated in the intervention from Jan 27 to May 20, 2015. It started with a 2 week weight-management camp involving physical and social activities, lifestyle learning, and dietary control. Participants then attended school as usual for 3 weeks. Ten, weekly after-school club sessions were then held, each lasting 2 h, involving further lifestyle education and engagement of participants’ parents, with the aim of encouraging consolidation of learning that had taken place at the camp, and continuation of healthy behaviours. A control group of obese children from the same Qatari schools received no intervention. The primary outcome variable was body-mass index SD scores (BMI SDS). Wilcoxon signed rank tests were used to assess changes in BMI SDS. Informed consent was obtained from participants and their parents. Ethics approval was granted by the Qatar University Institutional Review Board. Findings 56 children (42 girls) aged 9–13 years (mean 10·9, SD 1·1) took part in the intervention. BMI SDS ranged from 1·17 to 4·00 (mean 2·51, SD 0·62). The control group consisted of 37 children (27 girls) aged 8–12 years (mean 10·3, SD 1·1) with BMI SDS 1·40–3·98 (2·78, 0·43). Between the start of camp and the end of the clubs, there was no signifi cant change in control group BMI SDS (mean –0·004, SD 0·29; p=0·784), but signifi cant reduction in the intervention group BMI SDS (–0·10, 0·20; p=0·0003). Signifi cant BMI SDS reduction occurred for the intervention group during weight-management camp (–0·13, 0·12; p<0·0001) and after-school club (–0·12, 0·19; p<0·0001) stages; signifi cant BMI SDS increase occurred between these stages (0·15, 0·16; p<0·0001). Interpretation This small-sample study suggests that weekly lifestyle education sessions can be eff ective in helping to sustain weight-loss achievements from more intensive childhood obesity interventions. Half of the intervention group achieved an overall BMI SDS reduction of at least 0·10, which has been shown to be associated with important reductions in insulin and total cholesterol. Funding This research was supported by the National Prioritie |
Sponsor | National Priorities Research Program Qatar Foundation (grant X-036-3–01). |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | weight management camp obesity intervention Qatar |
Type | Conference |
Pagination | 72 |
Issue Number | S1-S83 |
Volume Number | 386 |
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