A Three-Year Evaluation of the Know Your Body Program in Inner-City Schoolchildren

The impact of the Know Your Body (KYB) comprehensive school health education program was evaluated in a sample of first through sixth-grade students from New York City, using two analytic strategies: a longitudinal cohort and a "posttest only" cohort. In both cohorts, program impact was examined between condition (i.e., KYB vs. no-treatment comparison group) as well as within condition (i.e., low, moderate, and high student exposure). Students in the longitudinal cohort (n = 1,209) who were exposed to high implementation teachers had significantly (p < .05) lower total plasma cholesterol and systolic blood pressure at 3-year posttest than comparison students. Students in the posttest only cohort (n = 3,066) who had high implementation teachers showed significantly (p < .05) lower total plasma cholesterol, systolic blood pressure, self-reported intake of meat and desserts, as well as higher health knowledge and self-reported intake of "heart healthy" foods and vegetables than comparison students. In both cohorts, program effects for several outcome variables were linearly related to level of student exposure to the curriculum, suggesting a dose-response effect. While several methodologic limitations may have influenced study outcomes, these data nonetheless appear to confirm that the KYB program can have a significant positive impact on the knowledge, behavior, and selected risk factors of students in primary grades and that efforts to disseminate and evaluate school health education programs should include strategies to monitor and enhance teacher implementation.

[1]  T. Tong,et al.  Cancer statistics, 1991 , 1991, CA: a cancer journal for clinicians.

[2]  D. Cross,et al.  The Role of Comprehensive School‐Based Interventions , 1991, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.

[3]  K. Resnicow,et al.  What do children know about fat, fiber, and cholesterol? A survey of 5,116 primary and secondary school students. , 1991 .

[4]  G. Parcel,et al.  Enhancing implementation of the teenage health teaching modules. , 1991, The Journal of school health.

[5]  H. Walberg,et al.  Effectiveness of teenage health teaching modules. , 1991, The Journal of school health.

[6]  R. Prineas,et al.  Diastolic fourth and fifth phase blood pressure in 10-15-year-old children. The Children and Adolescent Blood Pressure Program. , 1990, American journal of epidemiology.

[7]  C. H. Coralli Disease Prevention/Health Promotion: The Facts , 1990 .

[8]  P. Bush,et al.  A process evaluation of the District of Columbia "Know Your Body" project. , 1990, The Journal of school health.

[9]  Tom Baranowski,et al.  How individuals, environments, and health behavior interact : Social learning theory , 1990 .

[10]  J. Igoe Healthy People 2000. , 1990, Pediatric nursing.

[11]  E. Wynder,et al.  Plasma cholesterol levels of 6585 children in the United States: results of the know your body screening in five states. , 1989, Pediatrics.

[12]  B. Flay,et al.  Six-year follow-up of the first Waterloo school smoking prevention trial. , 1989, American journal of public health.

[13]  E. Wynder,et al.  Primary prevention of cancer among children: changes in cigarette smoking and diet after six years of intervention. , 1989, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[14]  W. Strong,et al.  Coronary artery disease prevention: Cholesterol, a pediatric perspective , 1989 .

[15]  P J Bush,et al.  Cardiovascular risk factor prevention in black schoolchildren: two-year results of the "Know Your Body" program. , 1989, American journal of epidemiology.

[16]  L. Johnston,et al.  Drug Use, Drinking, and Smoking: National Survey Results from High School, College, and Young Adult Populations, 1975-1988. , 1989 .

[17]  E. Wynder,et al.  Toward an effective school health education policy: a call for legislative and educational reform. , 1989, Preventive medicine.

[18]  I. Rosenstock,et al.  Social Learning Theory and the Health Belief Model , 1988, Health education quarterly.

[19]  A Hofman,et al.  Modification of risk factors for coronary heart disease. Five-year results of a school-based intervention trial. , 1988, The New England journal of medicine.

[20]  M. Horan Report of the Second Task Force on Blood Pressure Control in Children--1987. Task Force on Blood Pressure Control in Children. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Maryland. , 1987, Pediatrics.

[21]  C. Basch,et al.  Avoiding Type III Errors in Health Education Program Evaluations: A Case Study , 1985, Health education quarterly.

[22]  W. H. Snow,et al.  Skills intervention to prevent cigarette smoking among adolescents. , 1985, American journal of public health.

[23]  B R Flay,et al.  Psychosocial approaches to smoking prevention: a review of findings. , 1985, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[24]  J. Garrow,et al.  Quetelet's index (W/H2) as a measure of fatness. , 1985, International journal of obesity.

[25]  L. Kuller,et al.  Cholesterol screening in childhood: does it predict adult hypercholesterolemia? The Beaver County experience. , 1983, The Journal of pediatrics.

[26]  G. Berenson,et al.  Tracking of cardiovascular disease risk factor variables in school-age children. , 1983, Journal of chronic diseases.

[27]  D. Iverson,et al.  School health education. , 1982, Annual review of public health.

[28]  T. Baranowski,et al.  Social learning theory and health education. , 1981, Health education.

[29]  A. Eng,et al.  The "Know Your Body" program: a developmental approach to health education and disease prevention. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[30]  G. Botvin,et al.  Preventing the onset of cigarette smoking through life skills training. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[31]  Stanislav V. Kasl,et al.  Selected Psychosocial Models and Correlates of Individual Health‐Related Behaviors , 1977, Medical care.

[32]  S. Srinivasan,et al.  Serum Cholesterol and Triglyceride Levels in 3,446 Children from a Biracial Community , 1976, Circulation.