The growth monitoring recommendations apply to all children and youth 0–17 years of age who present to primary care. The prevention recommendations apply to all children and youth 0–17 years of age who have a healthy weight. They do not apply to children and youth with eating disorders, or who are underweight, overweight, or obese.
The management recommendations apply to children and youth 2–17 years of age who are overweight or obese. Children and youth with health conditions where weight management is inappropriate are excluded.
Estimates from 2009–2011 based on measured weight and height for children ages 5 to 17 years indicate that 32% are overweight (20%) or obese (12%), with the prevalence of obesity being almost twice as high in boys compared to girls.
Formal structured behavioural and lifestyle interventions, pharmacologic and surgical interventions.
Growth monitoring consists of measurement of height or length, weight and BMI calculation or weight-for-length according to age.
Appropriate primary care visits include scheduled health supervision visits, visits for immunizations or medication renewal, episodic care or acute illness, and other visits where the primary care practitioner deems it appropriate. Primary care visits are completed at primary health care settings, including those outside of a physician’s office (e.g. public health nurses carrying out a well-child visit at a community setting).
Behavioural modification programs involve several sessions that take place over weeks to months, follow a comprehensive-approach delivered by a specialized inter-disciplinary team, involve group sessions, and incorporate family and parent involvement. Behaviourally-based interventions may focus on diet, increasing exercise, making lifestyle changes, or any combination of these. These can be delivered by a primary health care team in the office or through a referral to a formal program within or outside of primary care, such as hospital-based, school-based or community programs.
We sought but found no evidence that the benefits and harms of intervention varied in accordance to patient and parent characteristics, including age, sex, and socioeconomic status.
Provider skills and intervention formats varied widely. Therefore, only general aspects of the effective behavioural interventions could be identified.
Resources for offering the most effective interventions are more likely to be found in team-based primary health care settings. Emphasis should be placed on the delivery of comprehensive weight management programs by a specialized inter-disciplinary team. Primary care practitioners who wish to partake in the delivery of such programs should receive adequate training.