Title | Effect of Comprehensive Interventions Including Nutrition Education and Physical Activity on High Blood Pressure among Children: Evidence from School-Based Cluster Randomized Control Trial in China |
Authors | Xu, Haiquan Li, Yanping Shang, Xianwen Du, Songming Zhang, Qian Liu, Ailing Ma, Guansheng |
Affiliation | Inst Food & Nutr Dev, Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr, Boston, MA 02115 USA Australian Catholic Univ, Sch Behav & Hlth Sci, East Melbourne, Vic 3002, Australia Chinese Nutr Soc, Beijing 100022, Peoples R China Chinese Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Natl Inst Nutr & Hlth, Beijing 100050, Peoples R China Peking Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Nutr & Food Hyg, Beijing 100191, Peoples R China |
Issue Date | Dec-2020 |
Publisher | INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH |
Abstract | Childhood hypertension has increasingly become a public health problem globally. However, limited literature research examined the effect of comprehensive interventions including nutrition education and physical activity on blood pressure among children. A total of 6764 children aged 7-13 years were analyzed based on a multicenter randomized controlled trial for comprehensive interventions in 30 primary schools in China to evaluate the effects on blood pressure, which lasted for two semesters. The standards used for the diagnosis of high blood pressure were the cut-off points based on age and sex for Chinese children. Compared with the control group, the intervention effects were -0.5 mm Hg (95% confidence interval (CI): -1.1, 0; p = 0.064) for diastolic blood pressure and -0.9 mmHg (95% CI: -1.5, -0.3; p = 0.005) for systolic blood pressure. For the incidence of high blood pressure, the changes were -1.4% in the intervention group and 0.4% in the control group (1.8% difference between the two groups, p = 0.015) after trial. The school-based comprehensive interventions appeared to have moderate effects on high blood pressure prevention among children in China. |
URI | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/601299 |
DOI | 10.3390/ijerph17238944 |
Indexed | SCI(E) SSCI |
Appears in Collections: | 公共卫生学院 |