School children doing sports
As a result local data was required to inform local planning and targeting of resources and interventions; and to enable tracking of local progress against the PSA target. Although many PCTs have already been carrying out measurement of children's height and weight, particularly at school entry, this was insufficient for our purposes.
The guidance to PCTs, published on 11 January 2006, provides advice on how to measure the height and weight of children in maintained schools in two age groups: the reception year (ages 4-5 years) and year 6 (ages 10-11 years). DH expects PCTs to make arrangements with primary school headteachers to carry out measurement in schools.
The local healthy schools programmes should be involved in this measurement process by encouraging schools to make use of the PCT system of weighing and measuring children. The measurement is for the purpose of monitoring obesity prevalence among population groups and is not designed to screen individual children for referral. This follows advice from the National Screening Committee that the current evidence on what works for obesity interventions at individual child level was not yet robust enough to support screening individual children. But the evidence so far does support interventions at school and community level. The NICE guidance to be published in 2007 will review obesity interventions and provide further advice about what works. Further guidance on data transfer, handling and analysis and feedback to PCTs is planned in April.
School children doing indoor sports
On entry to the website, please select National Child Obesity Database to log in. Usernames and passwords to access the database have been sent to Directors of Public Health in PCTs.
User Guidance is also available and can be downloaded using the link below.
If you have any technical problems with the spreadsheet please email:
The National Child Obesity Database is now operational. PCTs can now input height and weight data from their local child measurement exercises.
Access to the database is via a local Excel spreadsheet template that is available to download from the UNIFY website. See link below.
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