Ensure School Kids Have Nurses for Healthy Weight

Australian College of Nursing

ACN Position Statement - Working with Children Above a Healthy Weight: Nurse-led interventions

The Australian College of Nursing (ACN) is recommending that every school-aged child in Australia should have ready access to a suitably qualified registered nurse to provide care and guidance to ensure the maintenance of healthy weight.

The evidence-based recommendation is a key part of the new ACN Position Statement, Working with Children Above a Healthy Weight: Nurse-led interventions.

Interim ACN CEO, Emeritus Professor Leanne Boyd FACN, said today that, despite solid policy development, the proportion of Australian children above a healthy weight continues to rise.

Professor Boyd said that nurses, who compose more than 50 per cent of the health workforce, are uniquely positioned to identify at-risk children, educate families, and combat weight stigma.

"Nurse-led interventions, which are proven effective in various settings, offer a flexible and cost-effective solution," Professor Boyd said.

"Supporting nurses with training, resources, and leadership opportunities is crucial to optimise impact in combating childhood obesity.

"ACN supports policies that ensure every school-aged child has access to a qualified nurse.

"We recommend reforms to prioritise nurse-led care models."

ACN commends and supports the recommendations from The Obesity Collective, published in the March 2024 report, Obesity in Australia: A Time for Action, which covers prevention, treatment, and tackling stigma within existing policy frameworks.

The ACN Position Statement, Working with Children Above a Healthy Weight: Nurse-led interventions additionally recommends that:

  • Every school-aged child in Australia has access to a suitably qualified registered nurse.
  • Reform of current healthcare funding models to prioritise nurse-led models of care for areas that intersect nurses and children.
  • The normalisation of collection and discussion of height and weight data of all children, with longitudinal mapping on WHO recommended growth charts, as outlined in Working with Children Above a Healthy Weight: An ACN Toolkit for Nurses.
  • Empowering the nursing workforce via professional development to identify children at risk and provide timely, sensitive interventions targeting a whole-family approach to improve eating and activity behaviours.

The ACN Position Statement, Working with Children Above a Healthy Weight: Nurse-led interventions is at https://www.acn.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/position-statement-working-with-children-above-a-healthy-weight-nurse-led-interventions.pdf

The ACN Fact Sheet, Working with children above a healthy weight, is at https://www.acn.edu.au/wp-content/uploads/factsheet-working-with-children-above-a-healthy-weight-nurse-led-interventions.pdf

The Obesity Collective report, Obesity in Australia: A Time for Action, is at https://theobesitycollective.org.au/2024/03/a-time-for-action-new-obesity-collective-report/

/Public Release. This material from the originating organization/author(s) might be of the point-in-time nature, and edited for clarity, style and length. Mirage.News does not take institutional positions or sides, and all views, positions, and conclusions expressed herein are solely those of the author(s).