Overweight and obesity prevention for and with adolescents: The “Confronting obesity: Co‐creating policy with youth” (CO‐CREATE) project

Author:

Klepp Knut‐Inge12ORCID,Helleve Arnfinn1ORCID,Brinsden Hannah3,Bröer Christian4,Budin‐Ljøsne Isabelle5ORCID,Harbron Janetta6,Knai Cecile7,Lien Nanna2ORCID,Luszczynska Aleksandra8,Nesrallah Samantha9ORCID,Oldridge‐Turner Kate10ORCID,Rito Ana11,Samdal Oddrun12,Savona Natalie7ORCID,Stensdal Maja K.13,Allender Steven14ORCID,Hoelscher Deanna M.15,Rutter Harry16

Affiliation:

1. Division of Mental and Physical Health Norwegian Institute of Public Health Oslo Norway

2. Department of Nutrition, Faculty of Medicine University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. World Obesity Federation London UK

4. Department of Sociology University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

5. Department of Food Safety, Division of Climate and Environmental Health Norwegian Institute of Public Health Oslo Norway

6. Division of Physiological Sciences, Health through Physical Activity, Lifestyle & Sport (HPALS) Research Centre, Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town Cape Town South Africa

7. Health Services Research and Policy London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

8. CARE‐BEH Center for Applied Research on Health Behavior and Health SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities Wroclaw Poland

9. EAT Oslo Norway

10. World Cancer Research Fund International London UK

11. Centre for Studies and Research on Social Dynamics and Health—CEIDSS, Lisbon Lisbon Portugal

12. Department of Health Promotion and Development, Faculty of Psychology University of Bergen Bergen Norway

13. PRESS Oslo Norway

14. Global Obesity Centre, Institute for Health Transformation Deakin University Melbourne Australia

15. School of Public Health Austin Campus University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Austin Texas USA

16. Department of Social and Policy Sciences University of Bath Bath UK

Abstract

SummaryThe CO‐CREATE project focuses on the need for research on obesity prevention in adolescents to move away from studies of single interventions, toward the investigation of systems‐based research incorporating youth involvement. This paper provides an overview of the project, presenting the objectives, design, and novel methodologies applied, as well as findings to date and anticipated outcomes. Adolescents (16–18 years old) in five European countries participated. Methods applied in the project include monitoring and benchmarking of policies, systematic literature reviews, epidemiological surveillance, linking observed overweight and obesity trends to observed policy landscapes, group model building to identify perceived drivers of obesity, alliance building with adolescents, dialog with stakeholders, and system dynamics modelling to explore the potential impact of policy options. Outcomes include tools for developing policy ideas and investigation of prevention strategies with adolescents, including policy databases, system maps of drivers of obesity, protocols for organizing youth alliances, an intergenerational policy dialog tool, and system dynamic models exploring the impacts of cocreated policy ideas. These outcomes make an important contribution to building a pan‐European infrastructure for designing and evaluating policies and for providing youth with the opportunity to make their voices heard in the development and implementation of obesity prevention measures.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference29 articles.

1. EU Action Plan on Childhood Obesity 2014–2020.

2. World Health Organization.WHO Regional Office for Europe (2016). Growing up unequal: gender and socio‐economic differences in young people's health and well‐being. Health Behaviour in School‐aged Children (HBSC) study: international report from the 2013/2014 survey. WHO Copenhagen 2016.

3. The Complex Systems Challenge of Obesity

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