A Review of Primary Care-Based Childhood Obesity Prevention and Treatment Interventions

Elisabeth M Seburg, Barbara A Olson-Bullis, Dani M Bredeson, Marcia G Hayes, Nancy E Sherwood, Elisabeth M Seburg, Barbara A Olson-Bullis, Dani M Bredeson, Marcia G Hayes, Nancy E Sherwood

Abstract

Effective obesity prevention and treatment interventions targeting children and their families are needed to help curb the obesity epidemic. Pediatric primary care is a promising setting for these interventions, and a growing number of studies are set in this context. This review aims to identify randomized controlled trials of pediatric primary care-based obesity interventions. A literature search of 3 databases retrieved 2947 publications, of which 2899 publications were excluded after abstract (n=2722) and full-text review (n=177). Forty-eight publications, representing 31 studies, were included in the review. Eight studies demonstrated a significant intervention effect on child weight outcomes (e.g., BMI z-score, weight-for-length percentile). Effective interventions were mainly treatment interventions, and tended to focus on multiple behaviors, contain weight management components, and include monitoring of weight-related behaviors (e.g., dietary intake, physical activity, or sedentary behaviors). Overall, results demonstrate modest support for the efficacy of obesity treatment interventions set in primary care.

Keywords: Childhood obesity; Prevention; Primary care; Treatment.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Elisabeth M. Seburg, Barbara A. Olson-Bullis, Dani M. Bredeson, Marcia G. Hayes, and Nancy E. Sherwood declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Figures

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Fig. 1
Selection process. This figure illustrates the selection process for publications included in this review

Source: PubMed

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