Parenting Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enhancing Caregiver-Infant Communication to Prevent Obesity
Infancy is an important target period for obesity prevention because once obese as an infant, the relative risk of remaining obese appears to rise with increasing age at great cost to both individuals and society. The ability to self-regulate energy intake (eating when hungry and stopping when full) is vital to obesity prevention and it is thought that this ability can be derailed by a chronic mismatch between parental feeding behavior and the infant's state (feeding in the absence of hunger and/or feeding beyond fullness). The study will test a novel intervention to help parents and pre-verbal infants better understand one another during feeding and it will offer new insight into how self-regulation of energy intake develops during infancy.
Once obese as an infant, the relative risk of remaining obese appears to rise with increasing
age. Thus, the early years of life have been posited as an important target period for
obesity prevention. Widely viewed as a response to genetic, interpersonal, and environmental
factors, obesity fundamentally reflects an imbalance between energy intake and expenditure.
Self-regulation of energy intake aligned with physiologic need is essential to this balance.
The process(es) by which infants begin to disassociate eating behavior from physiologic need
is unclear, thus it is crucial to better understand predictors of individual differences in
self-regulation of energy intake. It is well established that autonomic regulation may
support infant behavioral regulation, suggesting that autonomic function may be a critical
area to consider here. Moreover, self-regulation is strongly influenced by dyadic interaction
quality during infancy, and findings reveal that more responsive interactions are associated
with more effective autonomic regulation. A chronic mismatch between a caregiver's feeding
behavior and the infant's state (feeding in the absence of hunger and/or feeding beyond
fullness), is thought to contribute to obesity by undermining the infant's capacity to
self-regulate intake; the current proposal will be the first to examine the effects on
autonomic regulation. The investigators propose an intervention to enrich the capacity of
mother-infant dyads to perform their respective interactive tasks. The investigators plan to
teach mothers American Sign Language (ASL) signs indicative of hunger, thirst, and satiety,
which they will in turn teach their preverbal infant. This training in ASL will be augmented
with targeted information for mothers about infants' capacities to self-regulate energy
intake in response to hunger and satiety and communicate those states with intention. Mothers
also will be taught about expected development of infants' eating behaviors and nutritional
requirements to support healthy growth.
Using a two-group randomized repeated measures design, this study aims to 1) evaluate the
feasibility and acceptability of the intervention and study methods, including recruitment,
enrollment, and data collection (self-report, anthropometrics, video observations, and
respiratory sinus arrhythmia [RSA]) for infants and their mothers; 2) evaluate the initial
impact of the intervention on observed feeding interactions, reported infant feeding
behaviors and maternal feeding behaviors/beliefs, and infant nutritional intake and growth;
and, 3) explore preliminary data on concordance between dyadic feeding interactions and
autonomic regulation in both mothers and infants (RSA). In addition to a variety of
self-report and anthropometric measures, this study will use integrated behavioral (video)
and physiologic (RSA) measures to better understand feeding dynamics and their relationship
with obesity risk. Understanding these processes is essential for developing appropriate
preventions, or interventions, that will help reduce the prevalence of early childhood
obesity and its extension into later childhood and beyond.
Study Phases:
Screening: screening for eligibility and obtaining consent
Study Treatment: study intervention/experimental treatment from baseline visit ([Time 1
(T1)]: age 4-9-months) monthly until 3-months post-baseline ([Time 2 (T2)]: age 7-12-months)
Follow-up: 6-months post-baseline ([Time 3 (T3)]: age 10-15-months)
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