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The Journal of School Nursing
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*Health Literacy
*Obesity
*Obesity in Children
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Article

Childhood Obesity Study: A Pilot Study of the Effect of the Nutrition Education Program Color My Pyramid

Jean Burley Moore, PhD, RN*, Lisa Renee Pawloski, PhD, Patricia Goldberg, MSN, RN, Kyeung Mi Oh, PhD, RN, Ana Stoehr, MSN, RN, and Heibatollah Baghi, PhD

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jmoore{at}gmu.edu.


   Abstract

The need for successful nutrition interventions is critical as the prevalence of childhood obesity increases. Thus, this pilot project examines the effect of a nutrition education program, Color My Pyramid, on children’s nutrition knowledge, self-care practices, activity levels, and nutrition status. Using a pretest–posttest, quasiexperimental design, 126 fourth- and fifth-grade students from experimental and control schools are compared. The intervention program incorporates an online component <url id="interref1" href="www.MyPyramid.gov">www.MyPyramid.gov</url>, Orem’s Self-Care Deficit Nursing Theory, and consists of six classes taught over a 3-month period. Results indicated that the program increased nutrition knowledge in the control group. Furthermore, it increased activity time from pretest to posttest and decreased systolic blood pressure for children in both groups; however, there were no significant differences in BMI percentiles. The findings indicate that Color My Pyramid can be successfully employed in school settings and thus support school nursing practice.

First published on April 10, 2009, doi:10.1177/1059840509333325

The Journal of School Nursing 2009;25:230.

A more recent version of this article appeared on June 1, 2009


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