Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study

Background: Childhood obesity is influenced by myriad individual, societal and environmental factors that are not typically reflected in current interventions. Socio-ecological conditions evolve and require ongoing monitoring in terms of assessing their influence on child health. The aim of this study was to identify and prioritise indicators deemed relevant by public health authorities for monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions. Method: A three-round Delphi Panel composed of experts from regions across Europe, with a remit in childhood obesity intervention, were asked to identify indicators that were a priority in their efforts to address childhood obesity in their respective jurisdictions. In Round 1, 16 panellists answered a series of open-ended questions to identify the most relevant indicators concerning the evaluation and subsequent monitoring of interventions addressing childhood obesity, focusing on three main domains: built environments, dietary environments, and health inequalities. In Rounds 2 and 3, panellists rated the importance of each of the identified indicators within these domains, and the responses were then analysed quantitatively. Results: Twenty-seven expert panellists were invited to participate in the study. Of these, 16/27 completed round 1 (5 9% response rate), 14/16 completed round 2 (87.5% response rate), and 8/14 completed the third and final round (57% response rate). Consensus (defined as > 70% agreement) was reached on a total of 45 of the 87 indicators (49%) across three primary domains (built and dietary environments and health inequalities), with 100% consensus reached for 5 of these indicators (6%). Conclusion: Forty-five potential indicators were identified, pertaining primarily to the dietary environment, built environment and health inequalities. These results have important implications more widely for evaluating interventions aimed at childhood obesity reduction and prevention.

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Main Authors: O’Donnell, Shane, Doyle, Gerardine, O’Malley, Grace, Browne, Sarah, O’Connor, James, Mars, Monica, Kechadi, M.T.M.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Childhood obesity, Delphi, Evaluation, Health policy, Intervention, Obesity, Public health,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/establishing-consensus-on-key-public-health-indicators-for-the-mo
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5735932024-12-04 O’Donnell, Shane Doyle, Gerardine O’Malley, Grace Browne, Sarah O’Connor, James Mars, Monica Kechadi, M.T.M. Article/Letter to editor BMC Public Health 20 (2020) ISSN: 1471-2458 Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study 2020 Background: Childhood obesity is influenced by myriad individual, societal and environmental factors that are not typically reflected in current interventions. Socio-ecological conditions evolve and require ongoing monitoring in terms of assessing their influence on child health. The aim of this study was to identify and prioritise indicators deemed relevant by public health authorities for monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions. Method: A three-round Delphi Panel composed of experts from regions across Europe, with a remit in childhood obesity intervention, were asked to identify indicators that were a priority in their efforts to address childhood obesity in their respective jurisdictions. In Round 1, 16 panellists answered a series of open-ended questions to identify the most relevant indicators concerning the evaluation and subsequent monitoring of interventions addressing childhood obesity, focusing on three main domains: built environments, dietary environments, and health inequalities. In Rounds 2 and 3, panellists rated the importance of each of the identified indicators within these domains, and the responses were then analysed quantitatively. Results: Twenty-seven expert panellists were invited to participate in the study. Of these, 16/27 completed round 1 (5 9% response rate), 14/16 completed round 2 (87.5% response rate), and 8/14 completed the third and final round (57% response rate). Consensus (defined as > 70% agreement) was reached on a total of 45 of the 87 indicators (49%) across three primary domains (built and dietary environments and health inequalities), with 100% consensus reached for 5 of these indicators (6%). Conclusion: Forty-five potential indicators were identified, pertaining primarily to the dietary environment, built environment and health inequalities. These results have important implications more widely for evaluating interventions aimed at childhood obesity reduction and prevention. en text/html https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/establishing-consensus-on-key-public-health-indicators-for-the-mo 10.1186/s12889-020-09814-y https://edepot.wur.nl/536222 Childhood obesity Delphi Evaluation Health policy Intervention Obesity Public health https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Childhood obesity
Delphi
Evaluation
Health policy
Intervention
Obesity
Public health
Childhood obesity
Delphi
Evaluation
Health policy
Intervention
Obesity
Public health
spellingShingle Childhood obesity
Delphi
Evaluation
Health policy
Intervention
Obesity
Public health
Childhood obesity
Delphi
Evaluation
Health policy
Intervention
Obesity
Public health
O’Donnell, Shane
Doyle, Gerardine
O’Malley, Grace
Browne, Sarah
O’Connor, James
Mars, Monica
Kechadi, M.T.M.
Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
description Background: Childhood obesity is influenced by myriad individual, societal and environmental factors that are not typically reflected in current interventions. Socio-ecological conditions evolve and require ongoing monitoring in terms of assessing their influence on child health. The aim of this study was to identify and prioritise indicators deemed relevant by public health authorities for monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions. Method: A three-round Delphi Panel composed of experts from regions across Europe, with a remit in childhood obesity intervention, were asked to identify indicators that were a priority in their efforts to address childhood obesity in their respective jurisdictions. In Round 1, 16 panellists answered a series of open-ended questions to identify the most relevant indicators concerning the evaluation and subsequent monitoring of interventions addressing childhood obesity, focusing on three main domains: built environments, dietary environments, and health inequalities. In Rounds 2 and 3, panellists rated the importance of each of the identified indicators within these domains, and the responses were then analysed quantitatively. Results: Twenty-seven expert panellists were invited to participate in the study. Of these, 16/27 completed round 1 (5 9% response rate), 14/16 completed round 2 (87.5% response rate), and 8/14 completed the third and final round (57% response rate). Consensus (defined as > 70% agreement) was reached on a total of 45 of the 87 indicators (49%) across three primary domains (built and dietary environments and health inequalities), with 100% consensus reached for 5 of these indicators (6%). Conclusion: Forty-five potential indicators were identified, pertaining primarily to the dietary environment, built environment and health inequalities. These results have important implications more widely for evaluating interventions aimed at childhood obesity reduction and prevention.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Childhood obesity
Delphi
Evaluation
Health policy
Intervention
Obesity
Public health
author O’Donnell, Shane
Doyle, Gerardine
O’Malley, Grace
Browne, Sarah
O’Connor, James
Mars, Monica
Kechadi, M.T.M.
author_facet O’Donnell, Shane
Doyle, Gerardine
O’Malley, Grace
Browne, Sarah
O’Connor, James
Mars, Monica
Kechadi, M.T.M.
author_sort O’Donnell, Shane
title Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
title_short Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
title_full Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
title_fullStr Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
title_full_unstemmed Establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a Delphi panel study
title_sort establishing consensus on key public health indicators for the monitoring and evaluating childhood obesity interventions : a delphi panel study
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/establishing-consensus-on-key-public-health-indicators-for-the-mo
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