mdlinx mdlinx
Latest (11) Full Text Articles (271) Article Summary

Healthy-lifestyle behaviors associated with overweight and obesity in US rural children Full Text
BMC Pediatrics,

Tovar A et al. – Rural children are not meeting recommendations to improve diet, reduce screen time and obtain adequate sleep. Although they expected obese children to be more likely to engage in unhealthy behaviors, they found the opposite to be true. It is possible that these groups of respondent parents were highly aware of their weight status and have been advised to change their children's health behaviors. Perhaps given the opportunity to participate in an intervention study in combination with a physician recommendation could have resulted in actual behavior change.

Methods
  • A cross-sectional analysis was conducted on a sample of school-aged children (6-11 years) in rural regions of California, Kentucky, Mississippi, and South Carolina participating in CHANGE (Creating Healthy, Active, and Nurturing Growing-up Environments) Program whose objective was to reduce unhealthy weight gain in school-aged children (grades 1-6) in rural America created by Save the Children (an independent organization that works with communities to improve overall child health).
  • After measuring children's height and weight, they assessed overweight and obesity (BMI [greater than or equal to] 85th percentile) associations with these behaviors: improving diet quality (>2 servings of fruits and vegetables/day), reducing whole milk, sweetened beverage consumption/day; obtaining adequate night-time sleep on weekdays ([greater than or equal to] 10 hours/night); limiting screen-time (i.e., television, video, computer, videogame) viewing on weekdays ([less than or equal to]2 hours/day); and consulting a physician about weight.
  • Analyses were adjusted for state of residence, children's race/ethnicity, gender, age, and government assistance.

Results
  • Overweight or obesity prevalence was 37 percent in Mississippi and nearly 60 percent in Kentucky.
  • Adjusting for covariates, obese children were twice as likely to eat > 2 servings of vegetables per day, less likely to consume whole milk, more likely to be told by their doctor that their child was obese, and less likely for their parents to report talking to their child about fruits and vegetables a lot/sometimes vs. not very much/never compared to healthy-weight children.

► Click here to access Full Text, PubMed, Publisher and related articles...
<< Previous Article | Next Article >>

Your Unread Messages in Hospital Administration

See All >> Messages include industry-sponsored communications and special communications from MDLinx

Most Popular Hospital Administration Articles

Last month's top read Top Articles of 2012

1 A 10 year systematic review of interventions to improve quality of care in hospitals Full Text BMC Health Services Research, August 31, 2012    Free full text    Evidence Based Medicine

2 Study: For-Profit Hospitals Outperforming Non-Profit, Public Hospitals in Medicare Reimbursement Performance Measures Full Text Healthcare Informatics, April 4, 2013    Free full text

3 Five Common Coding Errors in Medical Practices Physicians Practice, February 13, 2013

4 Initiating Call Center Protocols to Decrease Hospital Admissions Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, March 6, 2013    Review Article

5 Good Health at Low Cost 25 years on: lessons for the future of health systems strengthening The Lancet, April 8, 2013    Review Article

6 Should alternatives to conventional hospitalisation be promoted in an era of financial constraint? European Journal of Clinical Investigation, April 4, 2013    Evidence Based Medicine

7 Error Proofing Healthcare: An Analysis of Low Cost, Easy to Implement and Effective Solutions Leadership in Health Services, March 28, 2013    Review Article

8 Delay in discharge and its impact on unnecessary hospital bed occupancy Full Text BMC Health Services Research, December 10, 2012    Free full text

9 Health Care Cost Containment Strategies Used In Four Other High-Income Countries Hold Lessons For The United States Health Affairs, April 17, 2013    Review Article

10 Bioinformatics experts join Cedars-Sinai to develop personalized treatments based on patients' DNA Cedars-Sinai, April 15, 2013

11 Syndromic surveillance for health information system failures: a feasibility study JAMIA, April 24, 2013    Review Article

12 HHS awards UC Davis for reduction of ventilator-associated pneumonia UC Davis Health System, April 9, 2013

13 Ontario's Primary Care Reforms Have Transformed The Local Care Landscape, But A Plan Is Needed For Ongoing Improvement Health Affairs, April 10, 2013    Review Article

14 Health Care Cost Containment Strategies Used In Four Other High-Income Countries Hold Lessons For The United States Health Affairs, April 9, 2013    Review Article

15 Effects of an online personal health record on medication accuracy and safety: a cluster-randomized trial JAMIA, August 27, 2012

16 Innovation sustainability in challenging health-care contexts: embedding clinically led change in routine practice Health Services Management Research, April 16, 2013    Review Article

17 International Best Practices For Negotiating 'Reimbursement Contracts' With Price Rebates From Pharmaceutical Companies Full Text Health Affairs, April 15, 2013    Free full text    Review Article

18 Court finds three hospitals to be federal subcontractors Full Text American Hospital Association News, April 16, 2013    Free full text

19 Electronic Health Records and Ambulatory Quality of Care Journal of General Internal Medicine, April 5, 2013    Evidence Based Medicine    Clinical Article

20 Research Misconduct in Low- and Middle-Income Countries Full Text PLoS Medicine, April 12, 2013    Free full text

Indexed Journals in Hospital Administration: American Medical News, Health Economics, Wireless Healthcaremore

Other Topics in Hospital Administration

Register now to view all the MDLinx contents (FREE)!

  • Stay current on the latest literature, research and clinical news
  • Get special communications and offers from MDLinx and our sponsors
  • Receive invitations to paid market research
View Samples and Register

Stay current - Media Tool

Newsletter
RSS
Follow Us
Facebook

Receive free subspecialty
"5-minute updates" via email

Sign up!

Send the E-mail Newsletter to a Colleague


Send

Subscribe to our free RSS feeds:
Get the latest news in your specialty automatically added to your newsreader or your personal My Yahoo!, Google, My MSN or My AOL page. Learn More

Follow Us on Twitter
Twitter is a rich source of instantly updated information. Join today and follow @MDLinx to start receiving tweets. Learn More

Close