Economos Christina D, Anzman-Frasca Stephanie, Koomas Alyssa H, Chan Grace, Folta Sara C, Heck Julianne, Newman Molly, Sacheck Jennifer M
ChildObesity180, Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, 150 Harrison Avenue, Boston, 02111, MA, USA.
Gerald J. and Dorothy R. Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, 150 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA, 02111, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2017 Jan 27;17(1):125. doi: 10.1186/s12889-017-4040-2.
Tens of millions of children regularly participate in out-of-school-time (OST) programs, providing an opportunity for child health promotion. Most research on OST has focused on structured, staff-led after-school programs, as opposed to volunteer-led programs such as enrichment programs and youth sports. The aim of this study was to describe snacks, beverages, and physical activity (PA) practices in volunteer-led OST programs across five organizations in three states.
An online survey including the Out-of-School-Time Snacks, Beverages, and Physical Activity Questionnaire was distributed to 1,695 adult leaders of enrichment and youth sports programs serving 5-12 year-old children in Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, USA. The response rate was 57.8%, with 980 leaders participating and 698 (136 youth sports, 562 enrichment) remaining after data cleaning procedures. Frequencies were calculated to describe snack, beverage, and PA offerings during typical meetings and whether healthy snack, beverage, and PA criteria were met. Criteria were developed a priori with the intent to capture co-occurring practices that together indicate healthy snack (fruits and vegetables or no snack over salty/sweet snacks); beverage (water over sugar-sweetened beverages); and PA environments (regular opportunities for >15 or 45 min of PA in enrichment and sports programs, respectively).
About half of enrichment leaders reported that snacks and beverages were provided during typical meetings vs. one-fifth of sports leaders. In 28.4% of enrichment programs, PA was offered at every meeting vs. 98.5% of sports programs. Among enrichment programs, 50.4 and 25.8% met healthy snack and beverage criteria, respectively, and 29.4% met PA criteria, with 27.6% meeting criteria in two or more areas, and 5.0% in all three. Among sports programs, 72.8 and 78.7% met healthy snack and beverage criteria, respectively, and 71.3% met PA criteria. Eighty-two percent met criteria in two or more areas, and 46.3% met criteria in all three.
Most programs did not meet criteria for healthier snacks and beverages and opportunities for PA during typical meetings, indicating room for improvement in encouraging widespread adoption of these practices. Efforts to improve the healthfulness of snacks and beverages and increase opportunities for PA during volunteer-led OST programs are warranted.
数以千万计的儿童定期参加校外活动(OST)项目,这为促进儿童健康提供了契机。大多数关于校外活动的研究都集中在有组织的、由工作人员主导的课后项目上,而非像拓展项目和青少年体育等由志愿者主导的项目。本研究的目的是描述美国三个州五个组织中由志愿者主导的校外活动项目中的零食、饮料和体育活动(PA)情况。
一项在线调查,其中包括《校外零食、饮料和体育活动问卷》,被分发给美国缅因州、马萨诸塞州和新罕布什尔州为5至12岁儿童提供服务的1695名拓展项目和青少年体育项目的成年负责人。回复率为57.8%,有980名负责人参与,经过数据清理程序后,剩下698人(136名青少年体育项目负责人,562名拓展项目负责人)。计算频率以描述典型活动期间提供的零食、饮料和体育活动情况,以及是否符合健康零食、饮料和体育活动标准。这些标准是预先制定的,目的是捕捉共同出现的行为,这些行为共同表明健康零食(水果和蔬菜或没有咸/甜零食);饮料(水而非含糖饮料);以及体育活动环境(在拓展项目和体育项目中分别有定期的超过15分钟或45分钟体育活动的机会)。
约一半的拓展项目负责人报告说在典型活动期间提供零食和饮料,而体育项目负责人中这一比例为五分之一。在28.4%的拓展项目中,每次活动都提供体育活动,而体育项目中这一比例为98.5%。在拓展项目中,分别有50.4%和25.8%符合健康零食和饮料标准,29.4%符合体育活动标准,27.6%在两个或更多领域符合标准,5.0%在所有三个领域都符合标准。在体育项目中,分别有72.8%和78.7%符合健康零食和饮料标准,71.3%符合体育活动标准。82%在两个或更多领域符合标准,46.3%在所有三个领域都符合标准。
大多数项目在典型活动期间不符合更健康的零食和饮料标准以及体育活动机会标准,这表明在鼓励广泛采用这些做法方面有改进空间。有必要努力提高志愿者主导的校外活动项目中零食和饮料的健康程度,并增加体育活动机会。