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Determining the Optimal Amount of Structured Environments for Healthy Kids (DOSE)

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University of South Carolina

Status and phase

Enrolling
Phase 2

Conditions

Health Status Disparities
Ethnic Groups
Pediatric Obesity
Socioeconomic Factors

Treatments

Behavioral: Summer day camp

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06158594
Pro00125467

Details and patient eligibility

About

Studies show that virtually all increases in children's (5-12yrs) BMI occur during the summer, no matter children's' weight status (i.e., normal weight, overweight, or obese) at summer entry. Recent preliminary studies show that children engage in healthier behaviors on days that they attend summer day camps, and that BMI gain does not accelerate for these children. The proposed randomized dose-response study will identify the dose-response relationship between amount of summer programming and summer BMI gain.

Full description

Summer is a period of accelerated BMI gain for children (5-12yrs). Studies show that virtually all increases in BMI occur during the summer, no matter children's' weight status (i.e., normal weight, overweight, or obese) at summer entry. Our research team recently developed the Structured Days Hypothesis (SDH), which may explain accelerated summer BMI gain. The SDH posits that structure, defined as pre-planned, segmented, and adult-supervised compulsory environments, protect children against obesogenic behaviors and prevent excessive BMI gain. The SDH draws upon the 'filled-time perspective', which posits that time filled with favorable activities cannot be filled with unfavorable activities. In the context of the SDH, this means that children engage in more obesogenic behaviors that lead to increased weight gain during times that are less-structured (e.g., summer days) compared to times that are more structured (e.g., school days). Based on the SDH, pre-existing community-operated summer day camps (e.g., B&G Club, YMCA), may exert a positive influence on summer BMI gain by limiting children's engagement in obesogenic behaviors. Recent preliminary studies show that children engage in healthier behaviors on days that they attend summer day camps, and that BMI gain does not accelerate for these children. A major weakness in the rigor of these preliminary studies is that they cannot identify the dose-response relationship between structured summer programming and summer BMI gain. Dose-response studies can definitively identify the smallest dose at which a useful effect is observed while simultaneously revealing the maximum dose beyond which there is no further beneficial effect. In the same way determining the effective dose of structure to mitigate negative health outcomes is necessary to inform feasible, scalable interventions and health policy. The proposed randomized dose-response study will identify the dose-response relationship between amount of summer programming and summer BMI gain. The impact of 4 weeks (n=90, 20 days), 6 weeks (n=90, 30 days), and 8 weeks (n=90, 40 days) of summer programming compared to no program (n=90) will be evaluated. Comprehensive implementation monitoring to evaluate implementation will also be conducted. This will identify factors associated with children's summer BMI gain and obesogenic behaviors. The aims of the study are to: Aim 1. Evaluate structured summer programming's impact on children's BMI gain and obesogenic behaviors. Aim 2. Evaluate implementation and contextual factors and their relationship with children's summer BMI gain and obesogenic behaviors. Aim 3. Determine the cost effectiveness of 4, 6, 8 weeks of summer programming for mitigating accelerated summer BMI gain. This work is significant as it addresses a critical public health goal - reducing obesity - through programing during a timeframe - summer vacation - when substantial, long-lasting negative effects occur. This application is innovative because of the focus on identifying the dose-response relationship between structured summer programming and summer BMI gain. This innovation addresses a weakness in the rigor of previous studies and is critical for identifying the ideal dose of summer programming for mitigating accelerated summer BMI gain.

Enrollment

360 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

5 to 12 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • k-4th grader in a partner school
  • eligible for free and reduced price lunch (a widely recognized indicator of
  • socioeconomic level and poverty status)
  • parent that indicates "yes' on an informed consent document for participation in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of an intellectual disability, such as Down Syndrome, Fragile X, Fetal Alcohol
  • a physical disability, such as wheelchair use, that prevents the ability to ambulate without assistance.
  • Families who plan to enroll their children in a summer camp or relocate (i.e., move) during the 14-month period that they participate

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

360 participants in 4 patient groups

Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Children in this group will not receive a voucher to attend a pre-existing summer program
4-week voucher
Experimental group
Description:
Children in this group will receive a voucher to attend 4-weeks of a pre-existing summer program
Treatment:
Behavioral: Summer day camp
6-week voucher
Experimental group
Description:
Children in this group will receive a voucher to attend 6-weeks of a pre-existing summer program
Treatment:
Behavioral: Summer day camp
8-week voucher
Experimental group
Description:
Children in this group will receive a voucher to attend 8-weeks of a pre-existing summer program
Treatment:
Behavioral: Summer day camp

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Robert Weaver

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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