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Dive into the research topics where Ayodele A Ogunleye is active.

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Featured researches published by Ayodele A Ogunleye.


Acta Paediatrica | 2011

Ten-year secular changes in muscular fitness in English children

Daniel D. Cohen; Christine Voss; Matthew J D Taylor; Anne Delextrat; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Gavin Sandercock

1.Faculty of Life Sciences, London Metropolitan University, London, UK2.Department of Biological Sciences, University of Essex, Colchester, UK3.Centre for Research in Human Development, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, CanadaCorrespondenceDD Cohen, Faculty of Life Sciences, London Metro-politan University, London, UK.Tel: +44 207 133 4687 |Fax: +44 0207 133 4149 |Email: [email protected] October 2010; revised 25 February 2011;accepted 8 April 2011.DOI:10.1111/j.1651-2227.2011.02318.x


Pediatrics International | 2013

Physical Activity Questionnaire for children and adolescents: English norms and cut-off points

Christine Voss; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Gavin Sandercock

The Physical Activity Questionnaire for Children and Adolescents (PAQ‐C/‐A) provides general estimates of physical activity levels. Following recent expert recommendations for using the PAQ for population surveillance, the aim of this paper was twofold: first, to describe normative PAQ data for English youth; and second, to determine a criterion‐referenced PAQ‐score cut‐off point.


Preventive Medicine | 2012

Temporal relationships between screen-time and physical activity with cardiorespiratory fitness in English schoolchildren: a 2-year longitudinal study.

Daniel Aggio; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Christine Voss; Gavin Sandercock

OBJECTIVE To determine the temporal relationships screen-time and physical activity have with cardiorespiratory fitness. METHOD Measures were made over two years (2008-2010) in 1500 participants aged 11.5 (SD 0.5) years at baseline. RESULTS Tracking coefficients were low-to-moderate for all measures. At follow-up, 25% of participants moved from having low (<2h) to high (≥ 2 h) daily screen-time and 6% became unfit according to FITNESSGRAM standards. Baseline screen-time was the strongest univariate predictor of becoming unfit. Multivariate analysis controlling for decimal age, BMI and deprivation confirmed baseline screen-time as the strongest independent predictor of becoming unfit over the 2-year study period (OR 2.4; 95%CI:1.4-4.0). Current (OR 2.3; 95%CI:1.3-4.0) and previous (OR 1.7; 95%CI:1.0-2.9) physical activity levels also independently predicted becoming unfit. CONCLUSION There is currently no guidance for limiting screen-time in UK children. These longitudinal data add to the cross-sectional evidence of lower physical activity and fitness in children reporting ≥ 2 h daily screen-time. More importantly, these data demonstrate that high screen-time during childhood is an independent predictor of lower cardiorespiratory fitness in adolescence.


Annual Review of Nutrition | 2015

Health Benefits of Long-Term Weight-Loss Maintenance

Christian F. Rueda-Clausen; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Arya M. Sharma

Obesity is a chronic and complex medical condition associated with a large number of complications affecting most organs and systems through multiple pathways. Strategies for weight management include behavioral, pharmacological, and surgical interventions, all of which can result in a reduction in obesity-related comorbidities and improvements in quality of life. However, subsequent weight regain often reduces the durability of these improvements. The objective of this article is to review evidence supporting the long-term effects of intentional weight loss on morbidity, mortality, quality of life, and health-care cost. Overall, considerable evidence suggests that intentional weight loss is associated with clinically relevant benefits for the majority of obesity-related comorbidities. However, the degree of weight loss that must be achieved and sustained to reap these benefits varies widely between comorbidities.


Preventive Medicine | 2012

Screen time and passive school travel as independent predictors of cardiorespiratory fitness in youth.

Gavin Sandercock; Ayodele A Ogunleye

OBJECTIVE The most prevalent sedentary behaviours in children and adolescents are engagement with small screen media (screen-time) and passive travel (by motorised vehicle). The objective of this research was to assess the independence of these behaviours from one another and from physical activity as predictors of cardiorespiratory fitness in youth. METHODS We measured cardiorespiratory fitness in n=6819 10-16 year olds (53% male) who self-reported their physical activity (7-day recall) school travel and screen time habits. Travel was classified as active (walking, cycling) or passive; screen time as <2 h, 2-4 h or >4 h. RESULTS The multivariate odds of being fit were higher in active travel (Boys: OR 1.32, 95% CI: 1.09-1.59; Girls: OR 1.46, 1.15-1.84) than in passive travel groups. Boys reporting low screen time were more likely to be fit than those reporting >4 h (OR 2.11, 95% CI: 1.68-2.63) as were girls (OR 1.66, 95% CI: 1.24-2.20). These odds remained significant after additionally controlling for physical activity. CONCLUSION Passive travel and high screen time are independently associated with poor cardiorespiratory fitness in youth, and this relationship is independent of physical activity levels. A lifestyle involving high screen time and habitual passive school travel appears incompatible with healthful levels of cardiorespiratory fitness in youth.


Implementation Science | 2014

Implementation and evaluation of the 5As framework of obesity management in primary care: design of the 5As Team (5AsT) randomized control trial

Denise Campbell-Scherer; Jodie Asselin; Adedayo Osunlana; Sheri Fielding; Robin Anderson; Christian F. Rueda-Clausen; Jeffrey A. Johnson; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Andrew Cave; Donna Manca; Arya M. Sharma

BackgroundObesity is a pressing public health concern, which frequently presents in primary care. With the explosive obesity epidemic, there is an urgent need to maximize effective management in primary care. The 5As of Obesity Management™ (5As) are a collection of knowledge tools developed by the Canadian Obesity Network. Low rates of obesity management visits in primary care suggest provider behaviour may be an important variable. The goal of the present study is to increase frequency and quality of obesity management in primary care using the 5As Team (5AsT) intervention to change provider behaviour.Methods/designThe 5AsT trial is a theoretically informed, pragmatic randomized controlled trial with mixed methods evaluation. Clinic-based multidisciplinary teams (RN/NP, mental health, dietitians) will be randomized to control or the 5AsT intervention group, to participate in biweekly learning collaborative sessions supported by internal and external practice facilitation. The learning collaborative content addresses provider-identified barriers to effective obesity management in primary care. Evidence-based shared decision making tools will be co-developed and iteratively tested by practitioners. Evaluation will be informed by the RE-AIM framework. The primary outcome measure, to which participants are blinded, is number of weight management visits/full-time equivalent (FTE) position. Patient-level outcomes will also be assessed, through a longitudinal cohort study of patients from randomized practices. Patient outcomes include clinical (e.g., body mass index [BMI], blood pressure), health-related quality of life (SF-12, EQ5D), and satisfaction with care. Qualitative data collected from providers and patients will be evaluated using thematic analysis to understand the context, implementation and effectiveness of the 5AsT program.DiscussionThe 5AsT trial will provide a wide range of insights into current practices, knowledge gaps and barriers that limit obesity management in primary practice. The use of existing resources, collaborative design, practice facilitation, and integrated feedback loops cultivate an applicable, adaptable and sustainable approach to increasing the quantity and quality of weight management visits in primary care.Trial registrationNCT01967797.


Clinical obesity | 2015

5As Team obesity intervention in primary care: development and evaluation of shared decision-making weight management tools.

Adedayo Osunlana; Jodie Asselin; R. Anderson; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Andrew Cave; Arya M. Sharma; Denise Campbell-Scherer

Despite several clinical practice guidelines, there remains a considerable gap in prevention and management of obesity in primary care. To address the need for changing provider behaviour, a randomized controlled trial with convergent mixed method evaluation, the 5As Team (5AsT) study, was conducted. As part of the 5AsT intervention, the 5AsT tool kit was developed. This paper describes the development process and evaluation of these tools. Tools were co‐developed by the multidisciplinary research team and the 5AsT, which included registered nurses/nurse practitioners (n = 15), mental health workers (n = 7) and registered dieticians (n = 7), who were previously randomized to the 5AsT intervention group at a primary care network in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The 5AsT tool development occurred through a practice/implementation‐oriented, need‐based, iterative process during learning collaborative sessions of the 5AsT intervention. Feedback during tool development was received through field notes and final provider evaluation was carried out through anonymous questionnaires. Twelve tools were co‐developed with 5AsT. All tools were evaluated as either ‘most useful’ or ‘moderately useful’ in primary care practice by the 5AsT. Four key findings during 5AsT tool development were the need for: tools that were adaptive, tools to facilitate interdisciplinary practice, tools to help patients understand realistic expectations for weight loss and shared decision‐making tools for goal setting and relapse prevention. The 5AsT tools are primary care tools which extend the utility of the 5As of obesity management framework in clinical practice.


Public Health Nutrition | 2013

Prevalence of elevated mean arterial pressure and how fitness moderates its association with BMI in youth

Ayodele A Ogunleye; Gavin Sandercock; Christine Voss; Joey C. Eisenmann; Katharine Reed

OBJECTIVE Cardiorespiratory fitness is known to be cardioprotective and its association with the components of the metabolic syndrome in children is becoming clearer. The aim of the present study was to examine the extent to which cardiorespiratory fitness may offset the weight-related association with mean arterial pressure (MAP) in schoolchildren. DESIGN Cross-sectional study. SETTINGS Schoolchildren from the East of England, U.K. SUBJECTS A total of 5983 (48% females) schoolchildren, 10 to 16 years of age, had height, weight and blood pressure measured by standard procedures and cardiorespiratory fitness assessed by the 20 m shuttle-run test. Participants were classified as fit or unfit using internationally accepted fitness cut-off points; and as normal weight, overweight or obese based on BMI, again using international cut-off points. Age-adjusted ANCOVA was used to determine the main effects and interaction of fitness and BMI on MAP Z-score. Logistic regression models were used to estimate odds ratios of elevated MAP. RESULTS Prevalence of elevated MAP in schoolchildren was 14.8% overall and 35.7% in those who were obese-unfit. Approximately 21% of participants were overweight and 5% obese, while 23% were classified as unfit. MAP generally increased across BMI categories and was higher in the aerobically unfit participants. Obese-fit males had lower MAP compared with obese-unfit males (P < 0.001); this trend was similar in females (P = 0.05). CONCLUSIONS Increasing fitness level may have a positive impact on the weight-related elevations of MAP seen in obese and overweight schoolchildren.


Pediatric Research | 2013

Independence of physical activity and screen time as predictors of cardiorespiratory fitness in youth

Gavin Sandercock; Ayodele A Ogunleye

Background:Screen time (ST) is associated with physical activity (PA) levels. We aimed to investigate the relationship between ST and fitness.Methods:We assessed fitness and daily ST in 7,466 10–16-y-old schoolchildren from the east of England. The differences in fitness between ST groups, and the association between ST and fitness were assessed.Results:ST was negatively associated with fitness in boys of all ages (P < 0.001) and girls in grades 6–9 (P < 0.005). Boys were less likely to be fit if they reported >2 h/d ST (odds ratio (OR): 0.70, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.58–0.85) or >4 h/d (OR: 0.45, 95% CI: 0.35–0.57) ST, as were girls reporting >4 h/d ST (OR: 0.58, 95% CI: 0.43–0.78). Controlling for PA levels attenuated these odds in boys reporting >2 h/d ST (OR: 0.81, 95% CI: 0.66–0.91) or >4 h/d ST (OR: 0.65, 95% CI: 0.50–0.84) and in girls reporting >4 h/d ST (OR: 0.68, 95% CI: 0.50–0.93).Conclusion:These first data from English children show a negative association between ST and fitness in youth. Of note, very high levels of daily ST (>4 h) are associated with poor fitness. Some of the associations were mediated by PA levels. Our data support international recommendations to limit ST to <2 h/d; we believe such guidance should be issued in the United Kingdom.


Clinical obesity | 2016

Challenges in interdisciplinary weight management in primary care: lessons learned from the 5As Team study

J. Asselin; Adedayo Osunlana; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Arya M. Sharma; Denise Campbell-Scherer

Increasingly, research is directed at advancing methods to address obesity management in primary care. In this paper we describe the role of interdisciplinary collaboration, or lack thereof, in patient weight management within 12 teams in a large primary care network in Alberta, Canada. Qualitative data for the present analysis were derived from the 5As Team (5AsT) trial, a mixed‐method randomized control trial of a 6‐month participatory, team‐based educational intervention aimed at improving the quality and quantity of obesity management encounters in primary care practice. Participants (n = 29) included in this analysis are healthcare providers supporting chronic disease management in 12 family practice clinics randomized to the intervention arm of the 5AsT trial including mental healthcare workers (n = 7), registered dietitians (n = 7), registered nurses or nurse practitioners (n = 15). Participants were part of a 6‐month intervention consisting of 12 biweekly learning sessions aimed at increasing provider knowledge and confidence in addressing patient weight management. Qualitative methods included interviews, structured field notes and logs. Four common themes of importance in the ability of healthcare providers to address weight with patients within an interdisciplinary care team emerged, (i) Availability; (ii) Referrals; (iii) Role perception and (iv) Messaging. However, we find that what was key to our participants was not that these issues be uniformly agreed upon by all team members, but rather that communication and clinic relationships support their continued negotiation. Our study shows that firm clinic relationships and deliberate communication strategies are the foundation of interdisciplinary care in weight management. Furthermore, there is a clear need for shared messaging concerning obesity and its treatment between members of interdisciplinary teams.

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Christine Voss

University of British Columbia

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Daniel D. Cohen

Université de Sherbrooke

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