- 
             Something wrong with this record ?
 
Promoting health in rural transylvania, romania. a descriptive analysis of health promotion activities
Cătălin O. Baba, Alexandra Brînzaniuc, Emanuela O. Şirlincan, Răzvan M. Cherecheş
Language English Country Czech Republic
  Digital library  NLK 
   
   
      Full text - Article
   
   
   
   
      Issue
   
   
   
   
      Volume
   
   
   
   
      Source
   
   
   
   
      Source
   
   
 NLK 
   
      Free Medical Journals
   
    from 2004
   
      ProQuest Central
   
    from 2009-03-01 to 6 months ago
   
      Medline Complete (EBSCOhost)
   
    from 2006-03-01 to 6 months ago
   
      Nursing & Allied Health Database (ProQuest)
   
    from 2009-03-01 to 6 months ago
   
      Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
   
    from 2009-03-01 to 6 months ago
   
      Public Health Database (ProQuest)
   
    from 2009-03-01 to 6 months ago
   
      ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
   
    from 1993
    
    PubMed
          
           21361103
           
          
          
    DOI
          
           10.21101/cejph.a3609
           
          
          
  
    Knihovny.cz E-resources
    
  
              
      
- MeSH
 - Health Status Disparities MeSH
 - Financing, Organized MeSH
 - Humans MeSH
 - Health Promotion statistics & numerical data MeSH
 - Cross-Sectional Studies MeSH
 - Surveys and Questionnaires MeSH
 - Public Health Administration statistics & numerical data MeSH
 - Risk Factors MeSH
 - Health Behavior MeSH
 - Rural Health statistics & numerical data MeSH
 - Check Tag
 - Humans MeSH
 - Geographicals
 - Romania MeSH
 
Aim of the study: In 2006–2008 a survey analyzing food patterns, intake of main food items and leisure time activities of 5,410 schoolchildren was carried out. Methods: The study was performed in 13 randomly selected regions of Slovakia. 5,410 elementary school children (2,848 girls and 2,562 boys) aged from 6.3 to 15.9 years, mean age was 11±2.6 years, were included. The data collected by questionnaire concerned nutrition and leisure time activities. Results: Noteworthy results are that only 63% of participants eat breakfast regularly. Almost all of the children eat lunch during workdays regularly and 60.9% prefer a cooked (hot) dish for supper. Although dairy products are a substantial part of child nutrition, in general their consumption in our sample was low. Only 50.1% of children consume these daily and 62% of children drink milk daily, more often boys than girls. A striking observation is that only 65.5% of interviewed pupils eat fruit every day and 30.9% of them eat vegetables daily. The frequency of consumption of poultry and pork in our sample was almost the same, however, the analysis showed that only 14% of children consume fish once per week. Moreover, only 12.6% of subjects prefer wholegrain bread. In our sample 56.8% of children eat sweets daily, 32% prefer a salty snack almost 2 times per week. Within the group of pupils 35.8% do not attend physical trainings even once a week. Almost every child is used to watch TV and 64% of them play PC games daily. While both girls and boys watched TV on average over 2 hours, boys spend more time on PC per day than girls (girls 0.72 hours per day vs. boys 1.13 hours per day, p<0.001). The food patterns and leisure time activities of children older than 11 years and rural pupils were less favourable. Conclusions: According to results of our analysis we recommend to increase the consumption of dairy products, fresh fruits and vegetables in Slovak schoolchildren and spare no effort in making children to take breakfast regularly. It is necessary to promote daily moderate physical activity. Nutritional and lifestyle education should begin already in childhood.
References provided by Crossref.org
Lit.: 13
- 000
 - 00000naa 2200000 a 4500
 
- 001
 - bmc11001376
 
- 003
 - CZ-PrNML
 
- 005
 - 20111210201723.0
 
- 008
 - 110212s2010 xr e eng||
 
- 009
 - AR
 
- 024 7_
 - $a 10.21101/cejph.a3609 $2 doi
 
- 035 __
 - $a (PubMed)21361103
 
- 040 __
 - $a ABA008 $b cze $c ABA008 $d ABA008 $e AACR2
 
- 041 0_
 - $a eng
 
- 044 __
 - $a xr
 
- 100 1_
 - $a Baba, Cătălin O.
 
- 245 10
 - $a Promoting health in rural transylvania, romania. a descriptive analysis of health promotion activities / $c Cătălin O. Baba, Alexandra Brînzaniuc, Emanuela O. Şirlincan, Răzvan M. Cherecheş
 
- 314 __
 - $a Center for Health Policy and Public Health, Faculty of Political, Administrative and Communication Sciences, Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
 
- 504 __
 - $a Lit.: 13
 
- 520 9_
 - $a Aim of the study: In 2006–2008 a survey analyzing food patterns, intake of main food items and leisure time activities of 5,410 schoolchildren was carried out. Methods: The study was performed in 13 randomly selected regions of Slovakia. 5,410 elementary school children (2,848 girls and 2,562 boys) aged from 6.3 to 15.9 years, mean age was 11±2.6 years, were included. The data collected by questionnaire concerned nutrition and leisure time activities. Results: Noteworthy results are that only 63% of participants eat breakfast regularly. Almost all of the children eat lunch during workdays regularly and 60.9% prefer a cooked (hot) dish for supper. Although dairy products are a substantial part of child nutrition, in general their consumption in our sample was low. Only 50.1% of children consume these daily and 62% of children drink milk daily, more often boys than girls. A striking observation is that only 65.5% of interviewed pupils eat fruit every day and 30.9% of them eat vegetables daily. The frequency of consumption of poultry and pork in our sample was almost the same, however, the analysis showed that only 14% of children consume fish once per week. Moreover, only 12.6% of subjects prefer wholegrain bread. In our sample 56.8% of children eat sweets daily, 32% prefer a salty snack almost 2 times per week. Within the group of pupils 35.8% do not attend physical trainings even once a week. Almost every child is used to watch TV and 64% of them play PC games daily. While both girls and boys watched TV on average over 2 hours, boys spend more time on PC per day than girls (girls 0.72 hours per day vs. boys 1.13 hours per day, p<0.001). The food patterns and leisure time activities of children older than 11 years and rural pupils were less favourable. Conclusions: According to results of our analysis we recommend to increase the consumption of dairy products, fresh fruits and vegetables in Slovak schoolchildren and spare no effort in making children to take breakfast regularly. It is necessary to promote daily moderate physical activity. Nutritional and lifestyle education should begin already in childhood.
 
- 650 _2
 - $a financování organizované $7 D005381
 
- 650 _2
 - $a průřezové studie $7 D003430
 
- 650 _2
 - $a zdravé chování $7 D015438
 
- 650 _2
 - $a podpora zdraví $x statistika a číselné údaje $7 D006293
 
- 650 _2
 - $a disparity zdravotního stavu $7 D054624
 
- 650 _2
 - $a lidé $7 D006801
 
- 650 _2
 - $a řízení veřejného zdraví $x statistika a číselné údaje $7 D011635
 
- 650 _2
 - $a průzkumy a dotazníky $7 D011795
 
- 650 _2
 - $a rizikové faktory $7 D012307
 
- 650 _2
 - $a zdraví venkovských oblastí $x statistika a číselné údaje $7 D012423
 
- 651 _2
 - $a Rumunsko $x epidemiologie $7 D012383
 
- 700 1_
 - $a Brînzaniuc, Alexandra
 
- 700 1_
 - $a Şirlincan, Emanuela O.
 
- 700 1_
 - $a Cherecheş, Răzvan M.
 
- 773 0_
 - $w MED00001083 $t Central European journal of public health $g Roč. 18, č. 4 (2010), s. 198-201 $x 1210-7778
 
- 910 __
 - $a ABA008 $y 1 $b B 1826 $c 562
 
- 990 __
 - $a 20110211123325 $b ABA008
 
- 991 __
 - $a 20110516092559 $b ABA008
 
- 999 __
 - $a ok $b bmc $g 828564 $s 693287
 
- BAS __
 - $a 3
 
- BMC __
 - $a 2010 $b 18 $c 4 $d 198-201 $m Central European Journal of Public Health $x MED00001083
 
- LZP __
 - $a 2011-10/vtme