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. 2023 Sep 1;8(9):816-824.
doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2023.2231.

School-Based Cardiovascular Health Promotion in Adolescents: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial

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School-Based Cardiovascular Health Promotion in Adolescents: A Cluster Randomized Clinical Trial

Gloria Santos-Beneit et al. JAMA Cardiol. .

Abstract

Importance: School-based interventions offer an opportunity for health promotion in adolescence.

Objective: To assess the effect of 2 multicomponent educational health promotion strategies of differing duration and intensity on adolescents' cardiovascular health (CVH).

Design, setting, and participants: The SI! Program for Secondary Schools is a 4-year cluster randomized clinical intervention trial conducted in 24 secondary schools from Barcelona and Madrid, Spain, from September 7, 2017, to July 31, 2021. Eligible participants were adolescents enrolled in the first grade of secondary school.

Interventions: Schools and their participants were randomized to receive a health promotion intervention (SI! Program) over 4 school years (long-term intervention [LTI], 8 schools, 412 adolescents) or 2 school years (short-term intervention [STI], 8 schools, 504 adolescents) or to receive the standard curriculum (control, 8 schools, 441 adolescents).

Main outcome and measures: The primary end point was the between-group difference at 2 and 4 years in the change from baseline of the overall CVH score, as defined by the American Heart Association (range, 0-14 points, with a higher score indicating a healthier CVH profile). Intervention effects were tested with multilevel mixed-effects models. A complete-case intention-to-treat analysis was performed as the primary analysis.

Results: Of the randomized students, the study enrolled 1326 adolescents (684 [51.6%] boys, mean [SD] age, 12.5 [0.4] years at recruitment) with a study completion rate of 86.0%. Baseline overall CVH scores were 10.3 points in the LTI group, 10.6 points in the STI group, and 10.5 points in the control group. After 2 years, at halfway through the LTI and at the end of the STI, the difference in the CVH score change was 0.44 points (95% CI, 0.01-0.87; P = .04) between the LTI group and the control group and 0.18 points (95% CI, -0.25 to 0.61; P = .39) between the STI group and the control group. At 4 years, differences for the LTI and STI groups vs control were 0.12 points (LTI: 95% CI, -0.19 to 0.43; P = .42) and 0.13 points (STI: 95% CI, -0.17 to 0.44; P = .38). No adverse events were reported.

Conclusions and relevance: Overall, the tested school-based health promotion strategies in this randomized clinical trial had a neutral effect on the CVH of the adolescents. Although there was evidence of a marginal beneficial effect at a point halfway through implementation in the LTI group, such a benefit was not noted at 4 years. Further research is warranted into the efficacy of school-based health promotion programs.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03504059.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: Dr Estruch reported receiving grants from Instituto de Salud Carlos III Madrid, Spain (FIS AC 19/00100 and FIS AC 19/00100); from Patrimonio Comunal Olivarero, Spain, olive oil for the PREDIMED trial; from Borges, SA, Spain, almonds for the PREDIMED trial; from California Walnut Commission, USA, walnuts for the PREDIMED trial; from National Institutes of Health (NAAA-1U10AA025286-01 USA); from Fundación Bosch I Gimpera, and Fundació Clinic, Barcelona, unpaid support to research; from FIVIN, Grand-Fountain Laboratories and Fundación Cerveza y Salud for feeding trials on wine, nutritional supplements, and beer, respectively; from Fundacion Dieta Mediterranea, Barcelona, Spain, unpaid support for research; from Karolinska Institute, Menarini Laboratories, Sweden International Symposium on Cardiovascular Risk; from Fundación Iberoamericana de Nutrición VIII Summer Course; from Italian Pavilion, EXPO DUBAI 2020 Congress on Mediterranean Diet; from Cretan Lifestyle: Mediterranean Tradition & Modern Applications Congress for travels and accommodation, all outside the submitted work. Dr Lamuela-Raventós reported receiving grants from CIBEROBN (CB12/03/30020); and the Ministry of Science, Innovation, and Universities (AEI/FEDER, UE) PID2020-114022RBI00 outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.. Study Design and Primary End Point of the SI! Program for Secondary Schools
CVH indicates cardiovascular health.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.. Study Flowchart
First and second follow-up analyses are independent. No school discontinued the study. ITT indicates intention to treat.

Comment in

References

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