• Rev Assoc Med Bras (1992) · Nov 2016

    Review

    Educational strategies for the prevention of diabetes, hypertension, and obesity.

    • Alexandre Paulo Machado, Bruno Muniz Lima, Monique Guilharducci Laureano, Pedro Henrique Bauth Silva, Giovanna Pereira Tardin, Paulo Silva Reis, Joyce Sammara Santos, Domingos Jácomo, and Eliziana Ferreira D'Artibale.
    • Adjunct Professor, Department of Health Sciences, Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso (UFMT), Cuiabá, MT, Brazil.
    • Rev Assoc Med Bras (1992). 2016 Nov 1; 62 (8): 800-808.

    Objective:The main goal of this work was to produce a review of educational strategies to prevent diabetes, hypertension, and obesity.Method:PubMed database was consulted using combined descriptors such as [Prevention], [Educational Activities], [Diabetes], [Hypertension], and [Obesity]. Data from randomized trials published between 2002 and 2014 were included in spreadsheets for analysis in duplicate by the reviewers.Results:A total of 8,908 articles were found, of which 1,539 were selected about diabetes mellitus (DM, n=369), arterial systemic hypertension (ASH, n=200), and obesity (OBES, n=970). The number of free full text articles available was 1,075 (DM = 276, ASH = 118 and OBES = 681). In most of these studies, demographic characteristics such as gender and age were randomized, and the population mainly composed by students, ethnic groups, family members, pregnant, health or education professionals, patients with chronic diseases (DM, ASH, OBES) or other comorbidities. Group dynamics, physical activity practices, nutritional education, questionnaires, interviews, employment of new technologies, people training and workshops were the main intervention strategies used.Conclusion:The most efficient interventions occurred at community level, whenever the intervention was permanent or maintained for long periods, and relied on the continuous education of community health workers that had a constant interference inside the population covered. Many studies focused their actions in children and adolescents, especially on students, because they were more influenced by educational activities of prevention, and the knowledge acquired by them would spread more easily to their family and to society.

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