Stakeholder perspectives on the barriers and facilitators of engagement in healthy lifestyle behaviours in underrepresented adolescents: a focus group study from the European SEEDS project
Annemieke Wargers, Christopher M. Elphick, Famke J. M. Mölenberg, Amandine Senequier, Yannis Manios, Christina Mavrogianni, Claire Murray, Judit Queral, Lucia Tarro, Craig A. Williams, Dimitris Vlachopoulos, Wilma Jansen

TL;DR
This study explores barriers and facilitators to healthy lifestyle behaviors in underrepresented adolescents through stakeholder perspectives in the European SEEDS project.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into stakeholder views on promoting healthy lifestyles in low socioeconomic status adolescents through focus groups.
Findings
Stakeholders identified lack of knowledge, time, and financial resources as barriers for low SES adolescents.
Schools are seen as important facilitators but face structural barriers.
Collaboration with community and government stakeholders is viewed as beneficial.
Abstract
Obesity in adolescence has increased in the last decades. Adolescents fail to meet the recommended guidelines for physical activity (PA) and healthy diet. Adolescents with a low socioeconomic status (SES) particularly seem to have fewer healthy lifestyle behaviours. The European Science Engagement to Empower aDolescentS (SEEDS) project used an extreme citizen science approach to develop and implement healthy lifestyle behaviour interventions in high schools. As part of this project, key stakeholders were invited to reflect on the intentions of adolescents to engage in healthy lifestyle behaviours. The aim of this study was to gain stakeholder insights into the barriers and facilitators to healthy lifestyle behaviours of adolescents from low SES areas and on the possible role of these stakeholders in facilitating healthy lifestyle behaviours. Six semi-structured focus groups were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Physical Activity and Health · Behavioral Health and Interventions
