Institute for Families in Society, College of Social Work, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208, USA.
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2013 Apr;113(4):551-7. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2013.01.004.
School-based initiatives to combat childhood obesity may use academic performance to measure success. This cross-sectional study investigated the relationship between academic achievement and body mass index percentile, socioeconomic status (SES), and race by linking existing datasets that are not routinely linked. Data from a school-based project (with National Institutes of Health funding) concerning dietary recall accuracy were linked with data from the state's Department of Education through the state's Office of Research and Statistics. Data were available on 1,504 fourth-grade, predominantly African-American children from 18 schools total in one district in South Carolina during the 2004-2005, 2005-2006, and 2006-2007 school years. School staff administered standardized tests in English, math, social studies, and science. Researchers measured children's weight and height. Children were categorized as low-SES, medium-SES, or high-SES based on eligibility for free, reduced-price, or full-price school meals, respectively. Results from marginal regression analyses for each sex for the four academic subjects, separately and combined, showed that test scores were not related to body mass index percentile, but were positively related to SES (P values <0.0001), and were related to race, with lower scores for African-American children than children of other races (P values <0.0039). Cost-efficient opportunities exist to create longitudinal data sets to investigate relationships between academic performance and obesity across kindergarten through 12th-grade children. State agencies can house body mass index data in state-based central repositories where staff can use globally unique identifiers and link data across agencies. Results from such studies could potentially change the way school administrators view nutrition and physical education.
以学校为基础的对抗儿童肥胖计划可能会使用学习成绩来衡量其成功与否。本横断面研究通过链接现有的、通常不相互关联的数据集,调查了学习成绩与体重指数百分位数、社会经济地位(SES)和种族之间的关系。该研究的数据来自一个以学校为基础的项目(获得美国国立卫生研究院资助),该项目涉及饮食回忆准确性,通过该州的研究和统计办公室与该州教育部的数据相链接。数据可用于南卡罗来纳州一个地区的 18 所学校的总共 1504 名四年级、以非裔美国儿童为主的学生,在 2004-2005、2005-2006 和 2006-2007 三个学年期间。学校工作人员用英语、数学、社会研究和科学方面的标准化测试对学生进行评估。研究人员测量了儿童的体重和身高。根据他们是否有资格享受免费、降价或全价学校餐,将儿童分为低 SES、中 SES 或高 SES。分别对男女生的四项学术科目的边际回归分析结果显示,考试成绩与体重指数百分位数无关,但与 SES 呈正相关(P 值<0.0001),且与种族有关,非裔美国儿童的考试成绩低于其他种族的儿童(P 值<0.0039)。存在成本效益高的机会来创建纵向数据集,以调查幼儿园到 12 年级儿童的学习成绩和肥胖之间的关系。州机构可以将体重指数数据存储在州立中央存储库中,工作人员可以使用全球唯一标识符并在机构之间链接数据。此类研究的结果可能会改变学校管理人员对营养和体育教育的看法。