School of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies, University of California, San Francisco, USA; Department of Anthropology, History and Social Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2021 Feb;101:106255. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2020.106255. Epub 2020 Dec 25.
Promoting water consumption among children in schools is a promising intervention to reduce sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) intake and achieve healthful weight. To date, no studies in the United States have examined how a school-based water access and promotion intervention affects students' beverage and food intake both in and out of school and weight gain over time. The Water First trial is intended to evaluate these interventions.
Informed by the PRECEDE-PROCEED model and Social Cognitive Theory, the Water First intervention includes: 1) installation of lead-free water stations in cafeterias, physical activity spaces, and high-traffic common areas in lower-income public elementary schools, 2) provision of cups/reusable water bottles for students, and 3) a 6-month healthy beverage education campaign. A five year-long cluster randomized controlled trial of 26 low-income public elementary schools in the San Francisco Bay Area is examining how Water First impacts students' consumption of water, caloric intake from foods and beverages, and BMI z-score and overweight/obesity prevalence, from baseline to 7 months and 15 months after the start of the study. Intervention impact on outcomes will be examined using a difference-in-differences approach with mixed-effects regression accounting for the clustering of students in schools and classrooms.
This paper describes the rationale, study design, and protocol for the Water First study. If the intervention is effective, findings will inform best practices for implementing school water policies, as well as the development of more expansive policies and programs to promote and improve access to drinking water in schools.
在学校中鼓励儿童饮水是减少含糖饮料(SSB)摄入并实现健康体重的有前途的干预措施。迄今为止,美国尚无研究探讨基于学校的水供应和推广干预措施如何影响学生在校内外的饮料和食物摄入以及随时间的体重增加。Water First 试验旨在评估这些干预措施。
根据 PRECEDE-PROCEED 模型和社会认知理论,Water First 干预措施包括:1)在低收入公立小学的自助餐厅、体育活动空间和高流量公共区域安装无铅水站;2)为学生提供杯子/可重复使用的水瓶;3)进行为期 6 个月的健康饮料教育活动。在旧金山湾区的 26 所低收入公立小学进行了为期五年的群组随机对照试验,研究了 Water First 如何影响学生的水摄入量、来自食物和饮料的卡路里摄入量以及 BMI z 分数和超重/肥胖患病率,从基线到研究开始后 7 个月和 15 个月。使用混合效应回归分析差异中的差异方法,考虑到学生在学校和班级中的聚类,来检验干预对结果的影响。
本文描述了 Water First 研究的基本原理、研究设计和方案。如果干预措施有效,研究结果将为实施学校水政策提供最佳实践,并为促进和改善学校饮用水供应制定更广泛的政策和计划提供信息。