C.M. Devlin
University of South Carolina
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Journal of School Health | 2011
Suzanne Domel Baxter; Julie A. Royer; James W. Hardin; Caroline H. Guinn; C.M. Devlin
BACKGROUND Data from a school-based study concerning fourth-grade childrens dietary recall accuracy were linked with data from the South Carolina Department of Education (SCDE) through the South Carolina Budget and Control Board Office of Research and Statistics (ORS) to investigate the relationships of childrens school absenteeism with body mass index (BMI), academic achievement, and socioeconomic status (SES). METHODS Data for all variables were available for 920 fourth-grade children during 2 school years (2005-2006, 2006-2007). Number of school days absent for each child and eligibility for free/reduced-price school meals (SES measure) were provided to ORS by SCDE. Childrens weight and height were measured by research staff; age/sex-specific BMI percentile was calculated and grouped into categories. For academic achievement, Palmetto Achievement Challenge Tests scores were provided by the school district. The associations of absenteeism with BMI, academic achievement, SES, and school year were investigated with logistic binomial models using the modified sandwich variance estimator to adjust for multiple outcomes within schools. RESULTS The relationships between absenteeism and each of BMI percentile category and SES were not significant (all coefficient p values > .118). The relationship between absenteeism and academic achievement was inversely significant (p value < .0001; coefficient = -.087). CONCLUSIONS These results support the inverse relationship between absenteeism and academic achievement that was expected and has been found by other researchers. The lack of significant results concerning the relationships between absenteeism and both BMI and SES differs from earlier, limited research. More research to investigate these relationships is needed.
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2010
Suzanne Domel Baxter; James W. Hardin; Caroline H. Guinn; Julie A. Royer; Alyssa J Mackelprang; C.M. Devlin
BackgroundData from a dietary-reporting validation study with fourth-grade children were analyzed to investigate a possible relationship of body mass index (BMI) with daily participation in school meals and observed energy intake at school meals, and whether the relationships differed by breakfast location (classroom; cafeteria).MethodsData were collected in 17, 17, and 8 schools during three school years. For the three years, six, six, and seven of the schools had breakfast in the classroom; all other schools had breakfast in the cafeteria. Information about 180 days of school breakfast and school lunch participation during fourth grade for each of 1,571 children (90% Black; 53% girls) was available in electronic administrative records from the school district. Children were weighed and measured, and BMI was calculated. Each of a subset of 465 children (95% Black; 49% girls) was observed eating school breakfast and school lunch on the same day. Mixed-effects regression was conducted with BMI as the dependent variable and school as the random effect; independent variables were breakfast participation, lunch participation, combined participation (breakfast and lunch on the same day), average observed energy intake for breakfast, average observed energy intake for lunch, sex, age, breakfast location, and school year. Analyses were repeated for BMI category (underweight/healthy weight; overweight; obese; severely obese) using pooled ordered logistic regression models that excluded sex and age.ResultsBreakfast participation, lunch participation, and combined participation were not significantly associated with BMI or BMI category irrespective of whether the model included observed energy intake at school meals. Observed energy intake at school meals was significantly and positively associated with BMI and BMI category. For the total sample and subset, breakfast location was significantly associated with BMI; average BMI was larger for children with breakfast in the classroom than in the cafeteria. Significantly more kilocalories were observed eaten at breakfast in the classroom than in the cafeteria.ConclusionsFor fourth-grade children, results provide evidence of a positive relationship between BMI and observed energy intake at school meals, and between BMI and school breakfast in the classroom; however, BMI and participation in school meals were not significantly associated.
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2012
Amy Paxton; Suzanne Domel Baxter; Joshua M. Tebbs; Julie A. Royer; Caroline H. Guinn; C.M. Devlin; Christopher J. Finney
Data from four cross-sectional studies involving fourth-grade children were analyzed to investigate the relationship between participation in school-provided meals and body mass index (BMI), and the effect observed energy intake has on that relationship. Participation and BMI data were available on 1,535 children (51% black; 51% girls) for 4 school years (fall 1999 to spring 2003; one study per school year) at 13 schools total. Direct meal observations were available for a subset of 342 children (54% black; 50% girls) for one to three breakfasts and one to three lunches per child for a total of 1,264 school meals (50% breakfast). Participation in breakfast, lunch, and combined (both meals on the same day) was determined from nametag records compiled for meal observations for each study. Weight and height were measured. A marginal regression model was fit with BMI as the dependent variable; independent variables were breakfast participation, lunch participation, combined participation, sex, age, race, and study. For the subset of children, observed energy intake at breakfast, lunch, and combined was included in additional analyses. Participation in breakfast, lunch, and combined was not significantly associated with BMI regardless of whether analyses included observed energy intake (P values >0.181). The relationship between observed energy intake at breakfast and lunch, separately and combined, with BMI was positive (P values <0.01). In conclusion, these results do not support a relationship between school-meal participation and BMI but do support a relationship between observed energy intake at school meals and BMI during fourth grade.
The FASEB Journal | 2010
Suzanne Domel Baxter; Caroline H. Guinn; Julie A. Royer; James W. Hardin; Alyssa J Mackelprang; C.M. Devlin; Albert F. Smith
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2011
Suzanne Domel Baxter; Caroline H. Guinn; C.M. Devlin; Julie A. Royer; Russell R. Pate; Dawn K. Wilson
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2011
A.E. Paxton; Suzanne Domel Baxter; Julie A. Royer; Caroline H. Guinn; Joshua M. Tebbs; C.M. Devlin; Christopher J. Finney
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2011
Suzanne Domel Baxter; C.M. Devlin; Christopher J. Finney; Julie A. Royer; Joshua M. Tebbs; Caroline H. Guinn
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2011
Amy Paxton; Suzanne Domel Baxter; Caroline H. Guinn; Christopher J. Finney; Julie A. Royer; C.M. Devlin; Joshua M. Tebbs
The FASEB Journal | 2010
Suzanne Domel Baxter; Julie A. Royer; Alyssa J Mackelprang; C.M. Devlin; Caroline H. Guinn; James W. Hardin
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2010
Suzanne Domel Baxter; Julie A. Royer; James W. Hardin; Alyssa J Mackelprang; C.M. Devlin; Caroline H. Guinn