Health - Reuters
School-Based Program Cuts
Children's Diabetes Risk
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- Among Mexican-American children at high
risk for developing diabetes, a school-based
prevention program led to statistically
significant increases in fitness levels
and reductions in fasting glucose levels,
researchers report.
In fact, Dr. Roberto P. Trevino, of the
Social & Health Research Center in San
Antonio, Texas, told Reuters Health, "A
small but significant decrease in their
blood sugar levels signifies the potential
of controlling diabetes in these youth with
behavior interventions alone." The
main objectives of the program, which has
been operating in numerous inner-city elementary
schools in San Antonio for 8 years, are
to lower saturated fat intake and increase
dietary fiber intake and physical activity,
Trevino's team explains in the Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. The
program consists of a health class and physical
education curriculum, a family program,
a school cafeteria program and an after-school
health club. The researchers followed 1221
children who were about 10 years old on
average. Half of them were enrolled in the
program, and took part in an average of
32 sessions. After seven months, fitness
scores and dietary fiber intake increased
significantly in the participants compared
with the non-participating comparison group,
but body fat and dietary saturated fat intake
was unchanged. However, average fasting
glucose levels fell in the intervention
children and increased in the control children.
The researchers say that "the positive
effect of lifestyle changes" is encouraging.
Moreover, Trevino concluded, the program
helped children from low-income households
in particular, where obesity and a family
history of diabetes is clustered, "by
changing their environment -- home, school
cafeteria, after school and health class
-- and teaching them healthy knowledge,
beliefs and attitudes." SOURCE: Archives
of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, September
2004.