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School Programs and Characteristics and Their Influence on Student BMI: Findings from Healthy Passages

Tracy K Richmond, Marc N Elliott, Luisa Franzini, Ichiro Kawachi, Margaret O Caughy, M Janice Gilliland, Courtney E Walls, Frank A Franklin, Richard Lowry, Stephen W Banspach and Mark A Schuster

PLOS ONE, 2014, vol. 9, issue 1, 1-7

Abstract: Background: Little is known about the contribution of school contextual factors to individual student body mass index (BMI). We set out to determine if school characteristics/resources: (1) are associated with student BMI; (2) explain racial/ethnic disparities in student BMI; and (3) explain school-level differences in student BMI. Methods: Using gender-stratified multi-level modeling strategies we examined the association of school characteristics/resources and individual BMI in 4,387 5th graders in the Healthy Passages Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Additionally, we examined the association of race/ethnicity and individual BMI as well as the between-school variance in BMI before and after adding individual and school characteristics to test for attenuation. Results: The school-level median household income, but not physical activity or nutrition resources, was inversely associated with female BMI (β = −0.12, CI: −0.21,−0.02). Neither school demographics nor physical activity/nutrition resources were predictive of individual BMI in males. In Black females, school characteristics attenuated the association of race/ethnicity and BMI. Individual student characteristics—not school characteristics/resources-reduced the between-school variation in BMI in males by nearly one-third and eliminated it in females. Conclusions: In this cohort of 5th graders, school SES was inversely associated with female BMI while school characteristics and resources largely explained Black/White disparities in female weight status. Between-school differences in average student weight status were largely explained by the composition of the student body not by school characteristics or programming.

Date: 2014
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0083254

DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083254

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