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Promoting Healthy Development With the Recipe 4 Success Intervention

University of Wisconsin (UW) logo

University of Wisconsin (UW)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Poverty
Obesity

Treatments

Behavioral: Treatment as Usual Early Head Start
Behavioral: Recipe 4 Success

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03976089
Recipe4Success

Details and patient eligibility

About

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.

Full description

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.

Enrollment

73 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 36 months old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Family lives in York, Allentown, Williamsport/Lock Haven Pennsylvania
  • Family enrolled in Early Head Start home visit program
  • Target child 18-36 months old at beginning of study

Exclusion criteria

  • Family considered "in crisis" by home visitor (i.e., not able to focus on new intervention lessons because of child custody, family violence, mental health, or housing issues that currently demand parents' full attention)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

73 participants in 2 patient groups

Recipe 4 Success intervention
Experimental group
Description:
10 lessons delivered across 10 successive weeks within Early Head Start infrastructure by families' regular Early Head Start home visitors. Lessons involved active coaching in which parents and children prepared healthy snacks or meals. Lessons also included information on children's self-regulation skills and healthy eating habits.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Recipe 4 Success
Treatment as usual Early Head Start
Active Comparator group
Description:
Regular Early Head Start home visitors continued to implement evidence-informed developmentally appropriate curriculum designed to promote children's physical health, cognitive skills, and social-emotional functioning as well as parents' capacities to support their children's development.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Treatment as Usual Early Head Start

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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