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Child overweight has become one of today's most important public health concerns. Engaged and skilled parenting that models, values, and encourages healthy eating habits and a physically active lifestyle can play a key role in childhood overweight prevention and reduction. Primary care providers are well positioned to intervene with children and their parents, but face many barriers in addressing child overweight. A child overweight treatment approach is proposed for the primary care setting to facilitate parents' active involvement and self-efficacy in promoting healthy eating habits and physical activity for their children. We will test the following hypotheses: Hypothesis I (primary hypothesis): Children assigned to the intervention group will improve more in weight status (measured by BMI percentile) than children in the control group. Hypothesis II: Primary care providers assigned to the intervention group will improve more in their competence in addressing child overweight than the providers in the control group. Hypothesis III: After the intervention, parents in the intervention group will have more involvement and self-efficacy in promoting healthy weight for their children than parents in the control group. Hypothesis IV: Compared to the control group, the intervention group will improve more in family diet and eating, physical activity behaviors, as well as parental attitude and beliefs. Eighty children five to eleven years old who are overweight or obese will be recruited from two pediatric and two family practice clinics in southern Appalachia. Children will be randomly assigned to intervention and control groups based on clinic affiliation. Parents of children in the intervention group will participate in four clinic-based group sessions using the NIH We Can! curriculum moderated by a trained clinic provider, two individual brief motivational interviewing visits with their clinic provider, and four follow-up phone calls with the project coordinator or registered dietician. Parenting behaviors and attitudes, and family eating and activity habits, and children's weight status will be assessed at baseline, at the completion of the intervention, and at six months after the intervention. Changes in the assessments will be compared between treatment and control groups. Changes in provider and parent attitudes and perceptions about this treatment approach,adherence to the program, and estimates of associated time will be measured.
Full description
Specific aims of this project are: 1) to establish a primary care based and parent-mediated childhood overweight intervention program based on the Chronic Care Model in the primary care setting, 2) to explore the efficacy of this intervention in improving the weight status of children, 3) to examine the acceptability and feasibility of the approach among primary care providers and parents. Clinic providers and study personnel will be trained in the use of brief motivational interviewing (brief MI) for the visits and phone calls. The American Academy of Pediatrics 15-Minute Obesity Prevention Protocol will be used for individual visits while the NIH We Can! curriculum and materials will be used for group visits. Parents in the control group will receive the We Can! Parent Handbook and usual care. The intervention is designed to facilitate efficient communication of advice about behavior change, nutrition, and physical activity to parents. Partnership of primary care providers with parents and use of brief intervention techniques and group visits can be a practical approach. If proven to be effective, this approach can serve as an exportable model to other primary care practices and will reach a large proportion of the population and have far-reaching effects.
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67 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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