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Implementation of a School Nurse-led Intervention for / Schroede, Krista in Journal of Pediatric Nursing, Vol.35 No.4 (Jul-Aug) 2017 ([09/04/2017])
[article]
Title : Implementation of a School Nurse-led Intervention for : Children With Severe Obesity in New York City Schools Material Type: printed text Authors: Schroede, Krista, Author ; Jia, Haomiao, Author ; Wang, Claire, Author ; Smaldone, Arlene, Author ; Metrics, PlumX, Author Publication Date: 2017 Article on page: p.10-15 Languages : English (eng) Original Language : English (eng)
in Journal of Pediatric Nursing > Vol.35 No.4 (Jul-Aug) 2017 [09/04/2017] . - p.10-15Keywords: Childhood obesity, Nursing, School nursing, School health. Abstract: Purpose
The Healthy Options and Physical Activity Program (HOP) is a school nurse-led intervention for children with severe obesity. HOP was developed by experts at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and implemented in New York City schools beginning in 2012. The purpose of this study was to evaluate HOP implementation with the goal of informing HOP refinement and potential future HOP dissemination.
Design and Methods
This study entailed a retrospective analysis of secondary data. Analytic methods included descriptive statistics, Wilcoxon rank sum and Chi square tests, and multivariate logistic regression.
Results
During the 2012–2013 school year, 20,518 children were eligible for HOP. Of these, 1054 (5.1%) were enrolled in the program. On average, enrolled children attended one HOP session during the school year. Parent participation was low (3.2% of HOP sessions). Low nurse workload, low school poverty, higher grade level, higher BMI percentile, and chronic illness diagnosis were associated with student enrollment in HOP.
Conclusions
As currently delivered, HOP is not likely to be efficacious. Lessons learned from this evaluation are applicable to future nurse-led obesity interventions.Link for e-copy: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-pediatric-nursing/ Record link: http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27436 [article] Implementation of a School Nurse-led Intervention for : Children With Severe Obesity in New York City Schools [printed text] / Schroede, Krista, Author ; Jia, Haomiao, Author ; Wang, Claire, Author ; Smaldone, Arlene, Author ; Metrics, PlumX, Author . - 2017 . - p.10-15.
Languages : English (eng) Original Language : English (eng)
in Journal of Pediatric Nursing > Vol.35 No.4 (Jul-Aug) 2017 [09/04/2017] . - p.10-15Keywords: Childhood obesity, Nursing, School nursing, School health. Abstract: Purpose
The Healthy Options and Physical Activity Program (HOP) is a school nurse-led intervention for children with severe obesity. HOP was developed by experts at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and implemented in New York City schools beginning in 2012. The purpose of this study was to evaluate HOP implementation with the goal of informing HOP refinement and potential future HOP dissemination.
Design and Methods
This study entailed a retrospective analysis of secondary data. Analytic methods included descriptive statistics, Wilcoxon rank sum and Chi square tests, and multivariate logistic regression.
Results
During the 2012–2013 school year, 20,518 children were eligible for HOP. Of these, 1054 (5.1%) were enrolled in the program. On average, enrolled children attended one HOP session during the school year. Parent participation was low (3.2% of HOP sessions). Low nurse workload, low school poverty, higher grade level, higher BMI percentile, and chronic illness diagnosis were associated with student enrollment in HOP.
Conclusions
As currently delivered, HOP is not likely to be efficacious. Lessons learned from this evaluation are applicable to future nurse-led obesity interventions.Link for e-copy: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-pediatric-nursing/ Record link: http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27436