The CRCAH website (2003-2009) is archived here.

Transferability of a Mainstream Childhood Obesity Prevention Program to Aboriginal People

CRCAH Project No: IKCD321

Administering Organisation:
Flinders University

Project Leader:
Annabelle Wilson (PhD Student)

Contact Details:
annabelle.wilson@flinders.edu.au
Ph 08 8384 9259

Program Manager:
Arwen Nikolof
Chronic Conditions

Funding Sources:
SA Health (Annabelle is supported by an Australian Postgraduate Award and a top-up from SA Health)

Partners Involved:
- eat well be active community programs
- Aboriginal people/organisations in Murray Bridge & Morphett Vale, SA
- SA Health
- Flinders University
- CRC for Aboriginal Health

This project is endorsed as an in-kind project of the CRCAH.

Project Summary:

There are only a few examples of obesity prevention programs that have been conducted with children from Indigenous and different cultural groups around the world. This is disappointing, considering that the prevalence of overweight and obese individuals among Aboriginal Australians is high, and that as a single risk factor, high body mass is among the leading causes of illness and injury in Aboriginal Australians.

This PhD project is based on the eat well be active (ewba) community programs, a mainstream community-based childhood obesity prevention program that promotes healthy weight among children aged 0-18 years and their families, by encouraging them to eat well and be active.

This PhD project will investigate the effectiveness of - and transferability of - the intervention and evaluation components of the ewba program to Aboriginal people.

 

Summary of Projected Outcomes:

This research will add new evidence about the effectiveness of mainstream nutrition and physical activity programs for Aboriginal people, and whether or not such programs are transferable and appropriate. The project will explore a number of aspects, including:

  • The experiences of Aboriginal community members (children aged 0-18 and their families) with the ewba intervention and evaluation processes.
  • The experiences of Aboriginal workers who have been involved with ewba.

It will also provide insight into the effectiveness of mainstream strategies for childhood obesity prevention in Aboriginal people, and the implications of these findings for future practice in the areas of obesity prevention, nutrition and physical activity will be considered.

 

Summary of Project Implementation:

ewba is one of the first programs of its kind in Australia, and the first in South Australia. The ewba community programs are based in two ‘intervention’ communities (the rural city of Murray Bridge and the metropolitan suburb of Morphett Vale) and two ‘comparison’ communities (the rural city of Port Pirie and the Metropolitan Education district of Sea and Vines) in South Australia.

ewba has a high-quality evaluation framework which reflects the complexity of the intervention. This PhD project will use the ewba community programs as an example of a mainstream healthy eating and physical activity program to explore the effectiveness and transferability of mainstream health interventions to Aboriginal people. It will use the quantitative data collected as part of the evaluation of ewba but will also collect additional data to explore the project question.

 

Timeline

Start: March 2008
Estimated end date: mid-to-late 2011

Publications/Links:
eat well be active website: http://www.health.sa.gov.au/pehs/branches/health-promotion/hp-eat-well-be-active.htm

Wilson A, Magarey A and Mastersson N, 2008. "Reliability and relative validity of a child nutrition questionnaire to simultaneously assess dietary patterns associated with positive energy balance and food behaviours, attitudes, knowledge and environments associated with healthy eating". International Journal of Behavioural Nutrition and Physical Activity. 5(5).

 

[Last updated 06.05.2009]

Created 12 Apr 2010, updated 26 Aug 2010