45 research outputs found
Fexofenadine is Efficacious and Safe in Children (Aged 6-11 Years) with Seasonal Allergic Rhinitis
Background: This is the first prospective, randomized, doubleblind, placebo-controlled study showing statistical improvement
of an H1-antihistamine in children with seasonal allergic rhinitis in all symptoms throughout the entire treatment period.
Objective: This randomized, placebo-controlled, parallelgroup,double-blind study was performed to assess the efficacy and safety of fexofenadine in children with seasonal allergic rhinitis.
Methods: This study was conducted at 148 centers in 15 countries. Nine hundred thirty-five children (aged 6-11 years)
were randomized and treated with either fexofenadine HCl 30 mg (n = 464) or placebo (n = 471) tablets twice a day for 14
days. Individual symptoms (sneezing; rhinorrhea; itchy nose, mouth, throat, and/or ears; itchy, watery, and/or red eyes; and nasal congestion) were assessed at baseline and then daily at 7:00 AM and 7:00 PM (±1 hour) during the double-blind treatment period. Each total symptom score was the sum of all symptoms, excluding nasal congestion. The primary efficacy
variable was the change from baseline in the average of the daily 12-hour evening reflective total symptom scores throughout
the double-blind treatment. Safety was evaluated from adverse-event reporting, vital signs, physical examinations,
and clinical laboratory data at screening and study end point
Delivering inâschool interventions to improve dietary behaviours amongst 11â to 16âyearâolds: A systematic review
Childhood obesity is a global health concern, which has both shortâand longâterm health consequences for the individual, and is a potential burden on health care services and the wider economy. The school environment is a setting where changes can be applied to dietary behaviours, as schools have direct and intensive contact with children. This systematic review evaluated schoolâbased interventions designed to improve dietary behaviours among adolescents (11âto 16âyearâolds). The aims were to review types of interventions delivered, dietary behaviours targeted, and interventions' effectiveness in improving dietary behaviour and associated intervention components. Twentyânine schoolâbased interventional studies with this population were identified for review. The data were synthesized by identifying and comparing individual studies' results, intervention components, and characteristics.Interventions appeared more effective when they involved peers, used educational media to deliver health messages, increased availability of healthy foods in school,and incorporated computerâbased individualized feedback with normative information on eating behaviours. A limitation of the review was the lack of description in cer-tain reviewed studies and the nonfeasibility of conducting a metaâanalysis owing to study heterogeneity. Future interventions with this population could consider including the aforementioned components, genderâspecific feedback, and both shortâand longâterm followâups as change may not be apparent immediately and to determine if changes are sustained