A meta-analytic review of obesity prevention programs for children and adolescents: the skinny on interventions that work

Eric Stice, Heather Shaw, C Nathan Marti, Eric Stice, Heather Shaw, C Nathan Marti

Abstract

This meta-analytic review summarizes obesity prevention programs and their effects and investigates participant, intervention, delivery, and design features associated with larger effects. A literature search identified 64 prevention programs seeking to produce weight gain prevention effects, of which 21% produced significant prevention effects that were typically pre- to post effects. Larger effects emerged for programs that targeted children and adolescents (vs. preadolescents) and females, programs that were relatively brief, programs that solely targeted weight control versus other health behaviors (e.g., smoking), programs evaluated in pilot trials, and programs wherein participants must have self-selected into the intervention. Other factors, including mandated improvements in diet and exercise, sedentary behavior reduction, delivery by trained interventionists, and parental involvement, were not associated with significantly larger effects.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Flow chart illustrating the number of articles omitted for the various exclusion criteria.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Relation of the average age of participants to the weight gain intervention effect sizes.

Source: PubMed

3
Subscribe