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10-session home visit intervention conducted within Early Head Start and designed to reduce low-income toddler's obesity risk and improve their self-regulation skills and parents' sensitivity.
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Recipe 4 Success, the product of a university-community engagement collaboration, uses 10 tightly sequenced, structured, and scripted food preparation lessons, delivered as part of Early Head Start home visits, to help low-income parents learn to sensitively scaffold their toddler's self-regulation skills and establish more healthy eating habits. The intervention relies on an active coaching therapeutic approach to deliver content. Recipe 4 Success is focused on parents because their feeding practices influence children's diet, and interventions to prevent childhood obesity are most likely to have long-term effects when they emphasize positive parenting practices. Parents' sensitivity and constructive scaffolding behaviors are related to children's self-regulation skills, which are robust predictors of healthy eating habits and body mass index (BMI). For example, children who have difficulty with self-regulation by age 3 have a higher BMI through age 12. Importantly, these relations may be causal: Adults who are taught self-regulation skills appear more successful in maintaining healthy eating habits over time. As a preventive intervention, Recipe 4 Success is implemented when children are 2, the point at which deliberate self-regulation skills are starting to emerge and develop rapidly and taste preferences are being formed. Recipe 4 Success is designed for families living in poverty because parents are less likely to provide sensitive scaffolding and children are less likely to display well-developed self-regulation skills and healthy eating habits under conditions of economic adversity. Finally, Recipe 4 Success was created to be integrated into Early Head Start to expedite wide-spread dissemination and easy sustainability and to enhance the efficacy of this nation-wide home visit program. If successful, this will be one of the first preventive interventions to improve either toddler's self-regulation skills or their healthy eating habits and BMI.
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73 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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