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This is a plain English summary of an original research article. The views expressed are those of the author(s) and reviewer(s) at the time of publication.

The Healthy Lifestyle Programme delivered to 9-10-year-old school children did not reduce their weight over the course of two years. Around a third remained overweight or obese, the same as in schools that followed the standard syllabus.

This trial, funded by the NIHR, assigned schools across Devon to follow a lifestyle programme in Year five. The comprehensive curriculum included drama and activity workshops, personal goal setting and parental involvement.

Children made better food choices, but this did not affect weight outcomes. It was almost certain the programme wouldn’t give value for money.

Programmes addressing the wider school environment or delivered at the community or population level may have greater scope for preventing obesity.

Why was this study needed?

The Health Survey for England 2016 showed that 28% of children aged 2-15 are overweight or obese. Less than a quarter achieve recommended physical activity levels. Obesity-related illness costs the NHS around £6 billion each year, with £350 million in social care expenditure.

Child obesity is influenced by many factors including diet, exercise, family and socioeconomic background. Obese children are more likely to become obese adults and develop cardiovascular and metabolic problems like diabetes. Children from areas of socioeconomic deprivation are at highest risk.

The school environment seems the ideal setting for obesity prevention. It provides the organisational and social structure with which to educate a large number of children from across the socioeconomic spectrum. Extensive trials of school-based interventions have been conducted to date, which varies considerably in their delivery format and effects on weight and behaviour change. Furthermore, the majority come from the US.

The Healthy Lifestyle Programme (HeLP) took 10 years to develop an intervention that could be feasible and acceptable to schools, children and families and address some of the shortcomings of previous research. Learning from the previous research, these researchers wanted to pragmatically test the intervention in a large number of schools.

What did this study do?

This cluster randomised controlled trial allocated 32 primary schools in Devon to follow HeLP or the standard school syllabus. HeLP targeted children aged 9-10 years and was conducted in four phases, starting in the spring term of Year five.

Phase one aimed to create a “supportive context” establishing relationships and raising awareness of healthy lifestyles in a positive way. Phase two and three in the summer term involved an intensive healthy lifestyles week followed by personal goal setting with parental support. Final phase four in the autumn reinforced the messages learnt.

The delivery format varied from assemblies to activity workshops and drama groups. Sessions were provided by HeLP coordinators with assistance from teachers and other personnel (e.g. actors and sportspersons).

A total of 1,324 children participated, and 94% had a follow-up for two years.

What did it find?

  • HeLP had no effect on the main outcome of body mass index (BMI) at 24 months (mean difference [MD] between groups -0.02 kg/m2, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.09 to +0.05).
  • Neither was there any effect on body measures of waist circumference or percentage body fat at 18 to 24 months, or the proportion who were overweight or obese (31% of the intervention group vs 27% of controls).
  • There was no effect on reported levels of physical activity, though children who received HeLP consumed fewer energy-dense snacks (MD -0.47, 95% CI -0.84 to -0.11) and “unhealthy” foods (MD -0.64, 95% CI -1.17 to -0.11) on weekdays. There was no difference on weekends.
  • Analysis of the child-completed My Lifestyle Questionnaire indicated that improved knowledge, confidence and motivation, and family approval might have been behind these dietary changes.
  • The intervention was estimated to cost £214 per child. This was mainly attributed to costs of the various personnel, their training and travel. With no weight-related effects, nor reduction in obesity-related illness (such as diabetes or cardiovascular disease), it seemed clear the programme would not be cost-effective.

What does current guidance say on this issue?

NICE has public health guidance on planning and commissioning lifestyle weight management services for overweight and obese young people. Programmes should focus on core components of diet and health eating, increasing physical activity and decreasing sedentary time and behaviour change of the person and their close family. A tailored plan is advised to meet needs of the individual. Multidisciplinary team input may include such things as motivational techniques and positive parenting skills training.

NICE recommends that school nurses and those involved in delivering the National Child Measurement Programme (BMI is measured in Reception and Year six) raise awareness of lifestyle weight management.

What are the implications?

This was a carefully designed and implemented real-life test of the programme. Children completed the programme in sufficient numbers to detect a meaningful difference in outcomes if one existed. The results seem clear – it does not work.

That is not to say that other obesity prevention interventions can’t work or aren’t needed. HeLP targeted a single school year. The schools were representative of the average sociodemographic spread across England but did not have the same ethnic diversity.

Public health approaches that target the wider environment, the community, workplaces, and older children, may be more beneficial. The researchers themselves suggest that children of this age have limited ability to affect their diet and levels of physical activity and interventions targeting older children or families might have better success.

Citation and Funding

Wyatt K, Lloyd J, Creanor S, et al. Cluster randomised controlled trial and economic and process evaluation to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a novel intervention [Healthy Lifestyles Programme (HeLP)] to prevent obesity in school children. Public Health Res. 2018;6(1).

This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research Public Health Research Programme (project number 10/3010/01).

Bibliography

NHS Digital. Health Survey for England. London: NHS Digital; 2016.

NICE. Weight management: lifestyle services for overweight or obese children and young people. PH47. London: National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; updated March 2017.

Produced by the University of Southampton and Bazian on behalf of NIHR through the NIHR Dissemination Centre


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