Kristi Sidney Annerstedt

Kristi Sidney Annerstedt

Lektor | Docent
E-postadress: kristi.sidney@ki.se
Besöksadress: Solnavägen 1E, 11365 Stockholm
Postadress: K9 Global folkhälsa, K9 GPH Schäfer Elinder Sidney Annerstedt, 171 77 Stockholm

Artiklar

Alla övriga publikationer

Forskningsbidrag

  • Changemaker: Promoting co-designed sustainable health interventions with young changemakers for reduced risk of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in urban Burkina Faso, Kenya and Tanzania. 2024-2028.
    Vetenskapsrådet
    1 January 2024 - 31 December 2027
    The objective: To implement and evaluate a sustainable health intervention program on health, nutrition, and environmental outcomes for the primary prevention of adolescent obesity and other related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) together with adolescents in three rapidly urbanizing cities in Burkina Faso, Kenya, Tanzania. Background: There is an increasing epidemic of adolescent obesity that can contribute to adult obesity and morbidity and NCDs in a broader sense. Sustainable health interventions in urban low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are critical in addressing lifestyle factors that contribute to obesity, diabetes, and hypertension in later life, such as unhealthy dietary habits, inactivity, and sedentary behaviors while shaping urban environments. Considering obesity is a complex issue that is influenced by a wide range of interconnected factors, such as policy, environment, social, economic, cultural, behavioral, commercial, and biological determinants, a whole-systems approach that converges multiple sectors (i.e., health, education, environment, and agriculture) and stakeholders (i.e., adolescents, guardians, school administration and staff, local government and communities, policymakers and implementers, civil service organizations) are needed for obesity prevention in LMICs. Our strategy: Four evidence-based strategies, which will be adapted to context through a co-design process: 1) urban farming in schools with satellite farms and organic waste composting, 2) sustainable health modules for classrooms, 3) linking to healthcare workers through health talks using motivational interviewing techniques and 4) World Health Organisation (WHO) Best Buys: Mass media campaign. Our evaluation: Three cluster-RCTs in secondary schools, within the framework of urban Health and Demographic Surveillance Systems, implementation and process evaluation and cost-effective evaluation. Our expected results: Evidence of how to implement and scale a complex sustainable health intervention. Estimate a mean difference in Body Mass Index (BMI) z-score of 0.175 which could lead to a reduction of 5% in the prevalence of obesity. Our team: Multisectoral interdisciplinary team with experience in health sciences, social sciences, behavioral psychology, implementation science, economics and epidemiological methodologies, food science and nutrition and planetary health agriculture sciences from leading African, European and North American institutions.
  • European Commission
    1 January 2024 - 31 December 2027
    Changemaker objective: To implement & evaluate a sustainable health intervention program on health, nutrition, & environmental outcomes for the primary prevention of adolescent obesity & related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) together with adolescents in three rapidly urbanizing cities in Burkina Faso, Kenya, Tanzania. Background: There is an increasing epidemic of adolescent obesity that can contribute to adult obesity, morbidity & NCDs in a broader sense. Sustainable health interventions in urban low- and middle-income countries are critical in addressing lifestyle factors that contribute to obesity, diabetes & hypertension in later life, such as unhealthy dietary habits, inactivity & sedentary behaviors while shaping urban environments. Considering obesity is a complex issue that is influenced by wide range of interconnected factors, such as policy, environment, social, economic, cultural, behavioral, commercial, & biological determinants, a whole-systems approach that converges multiple sectors (i.e., health, education, environment, and agriculture) and stakeholders (i.e., adolescents, caregivers, staff, local government, communities, policymakers & implementers) are needed for obesity prevention in LMICs. Our strategy: Four evidence-based strategies, which will be adapted to context through a co-design process: 1) urban farming in schools with satellite farms and organic waste composting, 2) sustainable health modules for classrooms, 3) linking to healthcare workers through health talks using motivational interviewing techniques and 4) WHO Best Buys: Mass media campaign. Our evaluation: 3 cluster-RCTs in secondary schools, within the framework of urban Health & Demographic Surveillance Systems, implementation, process evaluation & cost-effective evaluation. Our expected results: Evidence of how to implement and scale a sustainable health intervention. Estimate a mean difference in BMI of 0.175 which could lead to reduction of 5% in the prevalence of obesity.

Anställningar

  • Lektor, Global folkhälsa, Karolinska Institutet, 2025-
  • Biträdande Lektor, Global folkhälsa, Karolinska Institutet, 2020-2025

Examina och utbildning

  • Docent, Global hälsa, Karolinska Institutet, 2022
  • Medicine Doktorsexamen, Karolinska Institutet, 2017
  • Medicine Doktorsexamen, Institutionen för global folkhälsa, Karolinska Institutet, 2016
  • Medicine Magisterexamen, Karolinska Institutet, 2011

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