Nutrients (Mar 2024)

Sustaining Healthy Habits: The Enduring Impact of Combined School–Family Interventions on Consuming Sugar-Sweetened Beverages among Pilot Chinese Schoolchildren

  • Chenchen Wang,
  • Yijia Chen,
  • Hao Xu,
  • Weiwei Wang,
  • Hairong Zhou,
  • Qiannan Sun,
  • Xin Hong,
  • Jinkou Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16070953
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 953

Abstract

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This study assesses the enduring impact of combined school- and family-based interventions on reducing the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) among schoolchildren in China. Two primary schools were assigned at random to either the Intervention Group or the Control Group, in Nanjing, eastern China. All students were in grade three and received an invitation to participate. In the first year, students in the Intervention Group received one-year intervention measures, including monthly monitoring, aiming to decrease the consumption of SSBs. Students in the Control Group only received regular monitoring without interventions. In the second year, both groups received only regular monitoring, without active interventions. A generalized estimating equations model (GEE) was used to assess the intervention effects. After two years, relative to the Control Group, the Intervention Group had a significantly improved knowledge of SSBs and an improved family environment with parents. In the Intervention Group, 477 students (97.3%) had adequate knowledge about SSBs, compared to 302 students (83.2%) in the Control Group (X2 = 52.708, p p p p > 0.05). In the first year, the volume of SSB consumption was significantly reduced by 233 mL per week in the Intervention Group, compared to an increase of 107 mL per week in the Control Group (p p > 0.05). The combined school-based and family-based interventions had a positive effect on the students’ knowledge of SSBs and their family dynamics during the first and second year. Relative to the Control Group, the Intervention Group had a statistically significant reduction in SSB consumption after 1 year, but not after 2 years.

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