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Adolescents’ Perspectives on the Drivers of Obesity Using a Group Model Building Approach: A South African Perspective

Gaironeesa Hendricks, Natalie Savona, Anaely Aguiar, Olufunke Alaba, Sharmilah Booley, Sonia Malczyk, Emmanuel Nwosu, Cécile Knai, Harry Rutter, Knut‐Inge Klepp, Janetta Harbron

2022International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Overweight and obesity increase the risk of a range of poor physiological and psychosocial health outcomes. Previous work with well-defined cohorts has explored the determinants of obesity and employed various methods and measures; however, less is known on the broader societal drivers, beyond individual-level influences, using a systems framework with adolescents. The aim of this study was to explore the drivers of obesity from adolescents' perspectives using a systems approach through group model building in four South African schools. Group model building was used to generate 4 causal loop diagrams with 62 adolescents aged 16-18 years. These maps were merged into one final map, and the main themes were identified: (i) physical activity and social media use; (ii) physical activity, health-related morbidity, and socio-economic status; (iii) accessibility of unhealthy food and energy intake/body weight; (iv) psychological distress, body weight, and weight-related bullying; and (v) parental involvement and unhealthy food intake. Our study identified meaningful policy-relevant insights into the drivers of adolescent obesity, as described by the young people themselves in a South African context. This approach, both the process of construction and the final visualization, provides a basis for taking a novel approach to prevention and intervention recommendations for adolescent obesity.

Topics & Concepts

PsychosocialOverweightContext (archaeology)ObesityIntervention (counseling)PsychologyPoison controlPerspective (graphical)GerontologyHuman factors and ergonomicsEnvironmental healthOccupational safety and healthDevelopmental psychologyMedicineGeographyPsychiatryComputer sciencePathologyInternal medicineArchaeologyArtificial intelligenceHealth Policy Implementation ScienceCommunity Health and DevelopmentBehavioral Health and Interventions
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