Table 2. (Continued) Mean Author Khavajou et al. (2007) Datesa January 2004 to June 2005 Settingb Women's prison in Pierre, South Dakota, where WISEWOMAN program trained prison staff for screening interventions Leigey and Johnston (2015) May 2013 to June 2013 Georgia Department of Corrections offender database; 50+ year-old women from 3 of 31 Georgia's state prisons Wolff et al. (2012) June 2009 to August 2009 Soon-to-be-released inmates within 24 months of parole or maximum sentence date in 11 state prisons (10 male and 1 female); 33 computer stations with research assistants available May 2014 to August 2014 Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions, a unified system that serves as a combined prison/ jail for the state's pretrial and sentenced inmates; men in a medium-security facility in the Northeast Data collection methodc V: WISEWOMAN program intervention Study design Crosssectional cohort Average length of incarceration Authors do not have access to information on the duration of incarceration O: coders collected data from online database Secondary analysis of offender database 5.4 Years BMI measurementd Study quality No. of females female age (years) No. of obese females (%) Measured Very low 261 39.3 111 (42.4) Female weight gain N/A No. of males Mean male age (years) No. of obese males (%) X X X Mean weight gain X Sample size (n) 261 Unknown Low 458 56.1 165 (36) N/A X X X X 458 V: survey administered using audio computer-assisted self-interviews Crosssectional Not reported Self-report Moderate 217 36.5 91 (41.9) 49.6% 3958 33.8 1,187 (29.9) 60.1% 175 Studies describing measured assessment of weight change (N= 4) Baldwin et al. (2016) V/O: research assistants interviewed and measured height, weight, waist circumference and BP; weight obtained by medical records Crosssectional longitudinal 179.5 days (eligibility criterion was <365 days) Measured low X X X X 103 39.5 47 (45.6) 75%; 0.37 lb (0.167 kg)/ week 103 (continued) 126