. Schools are an important setting for health promotion because they afford children and adolescents numerous opportunities to accumulate the recommended physical activity (PA) minutes and make other health-related decisions, including healthy eating. Unfortunately, there is little evidence of coordinated school-based health interventions in rural Appalachia. The Greenbrier Children's Health Opportunities Involving Coordinated Efforts in Schools Project was a federally funded, 3-year, multicomponent school-based health intervention focused on PA, healthy eating, and weight management. . The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of Greenbrier Children's Health Opportunities Involving Coordinated Efforts in Schools on adolescent PA, dietary behaviors, and weight status. . Measures of PA, dietary behaviors, and body mass index were collected across 14 data points throughout the intervention (including a baseline in Year 1). . Participants included 4,633 randomly selected middle school students ( = 2,289, = 2,344) across the intervention. Baseline to Year 3 findings revealed a 12.8 percentage point increase in students achieving 60 minutes of daily PA. There were no significant differences in either dietary behavior or body mass index. . Findings provide evidence of the positive impact comprehensive school-based health interventions can have on middle school student health-related behaviors. . Schools remain an ideal setting for health promotion. Initiatives targeting more than one level of influence on health-related behaviors are more likely to succeed.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7418062PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1090198119897612DOI Listing

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