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The Impact of School-Based Nutrition Interventions on Parents and Other Family Members: A Systematic Literature Review

Authors

Abderbwih,  Eman
External Organizations;

Mahanani,  Melani Ratih
External Organizations;

Deckert,  Andreas
External Organizations;

Antia,  Khatia
External Organizations;

Agbaria,  Nisreen
External Organizations;

Dambach,  Peter
External Organizations;

Kohler,  Stefan
External Organizations;

Horstick,  Olaf
External Organizations;

Winkler,  Volker
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Amanda.Wendt

Wendt,  Amanda
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

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Fulltext (public)

27525oa.pdf
(Publisher version), 691KB

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Citation

Abderbwih, E., Mahanani, M. R., Deckert, A., Antia, K., Agbaria, N., Dambach, P., Kohler, S., Horstick, O., Winkler, V., Wendt, A. (2022): The Impact of School-Based Nutrition Interventions on Parents and Other Family Members: A Systematic Literature Review. - Nutrients, 14, 12, 2399.
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14122399


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_27525
Abstract
Little is known about the impact of school-based nutrition interventions on parents and other family members. This systematic review aims to explore the impact of school-based nutrition interventions on different parental/family outcomes, mainly dietary intake, nutrition knowledge, and health outcomes. PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO, EconLit, Cochrane Reviews, and Google Scholar were systematically searched for controlled trials or natural experiments measuring the impact of school-based nutrition interventions, with or without parental involvement, on parents/families of school children. Twenty-two studies met the inclusion criteria. Of which, 15 studies assessed the impact of school-based nutrition interventions on parental/family dietary intake, 10 on parental/family nutrition knowledge, and 2 on parental/family health outcomes. Inconsistent results were found for parental dietary intake with six studies reporting favorable effects. Most studies found improved parental nutrition knowledge. Positive impacts were seen by both studies that assessed the impact on a parental health outcome. Overall, we found that there is potential for school-based nutrition interventions to result in positive effects for parents, in particular for nutrition knowledge. More research is needed to assess the impacts of school-based nutrition interventions on parents and other family members and to assess important intervention characteristics in creating a positive impact.