Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Use of Text Messaging for Positive Reinforcement to Help Improve Quality of Life in Pediatric Obese Patients
This study hopes to investigate the relationship between positive reinforcement for exercise activities in pediatric obese participants and quality of life. The investigators hypothesize that providing positive reinforcement through text messaging to children living with obesity will improve their overall quality of life. The investigators will recruit pediatric obese participants and administer a pre and post survey regarding quality of life. The family will be given recommendations on various ways to increase physical activity weekly. These participants will then receive positive reinforcement for completed exercises through text messages.
This will be a prospective interventional cohort study following a group of participants with
obesity. Informed consent will be obtained from the parents from a member of the research
committee. Informed assent will also be obtained from the participant from a member of the
research committee.
The investigators will review the schedule in the pediatrics department daily and approach
all participants that meet our inclusion criteria. Per standard of care for participants with
obesity, the participants have a scheduled follow up for a weight check at regular intervals
that can include one month, 3 months or 6 months.
The 40 participants will be randomly assigned to either a control group or an intervention
group.
Survey:
A 23 item PedsQL 4.0 pre-survey will be administered to pediatric participants to establish a
baseline at their wellness visits. The parent of the participant will also be given a PedsQL
survey to fill out. The participants' Body Mass Index (BMI) and blood pressure will be
recorded. At the end of the 6-month period, the same PedsQL 4.0 will be administered again to
both the participant and parent at the scheduled 6-month weight check that is standard of
care.
The investigators will use a text message application created by the Loyola informatics team.
This application will be able to text the participants using their cell phone number via an
email service from the provider. For example, 123456789@cellservice provider.com. This allows
the research team to send text messages to be sent through an application without using a
personal phone number. In addition, it offers automatic responses that will save them when
sending messages to the participant.
For six months, participants in the study will receive a text message twice per week via this
application.
Text messaging:
There will be two groups within this study-a control group and an intervention group. For the
control group, participants will receive two text messages weekly. The first text message
will ask if the participants have completed the recommended activity. When a participant
responds, the participant will receive a second text message stating, "Thanks for your
response."
In the intervention group, the first text message will ask if the participant completed the
recommended activity. If the participant responds yes, the participant will receive a
positive reinforcement response comprising the words "Great job! We're so proud of you! Keep
up the good work!". If the participant responds no, the participant will receive a text
message stating, "Thank you for your response."
Study Activities:
The weekly activities the investigators will recommend for the participants include:
1. Walking for 30 minutes 3 times a week
2. Speed walk for 30 minutes 3 times a week
3. Walk up and down stairs for 30 minutes 3 times a week
4. Jogging for 30 minutes 3 times a week
5. Jumping jacks for 30 minute 3 times a week
Data:
All participant data will be stored in a protected Data-base, REDcap.
Statistical analysis:
In this study, participants who are age 18 and under with a BMI in at least the 95th
percentile will be asked to complete assigned exercises. For six months, these participants
will receive a text message twice per week asking whether the participant has completed the
assigned exercises. For participants marking "Yes", exactly one half will be randomized to
receive a positive reinforcement response comprising the words "Great job! We're so proud of
you! Keep up the good work!". The other half will receive a control response comprising the
words "Thanks for your response"; all participants marking "No" will receive this same
response. The study will use a 1:1 allocation.
Six months following randomization, one goal of the proposed study is to test the null
hypothesis that average total score on PedsQL 4.0 questionnaire between the two groups are
equal. With a proposed sample size of 20 assigned to receive the positive reinforcement
response and 20 assigned to receive the control response (N = 40), the study will have power
of 80.0 percent to yield a statistically significant result. This computation assumes a mean
difference between the two cohorts of 14.8 points (corresponding to means of 81.8 for the
positive reinforcement cohort and 67.0 for the control response cohort) and a common
within-group standard deviation of 16.3 points (Schwimmer, et al.). This computation also
assumes the criterion for significance (alpha) is 0.05 and that the test will be 2-tailed,
meaning an effect in either direction will be interpreted.
Recommended Protocol Text for the Analysis Plan:
Participants under age 18 with a BMI in at least the 95th percentile will be asked to
complete assigned exercises and will receive text messages asking the participants if the
participant has completed such exercises. At baseline and the end of the study, the
participants will complete the 23-item PedsQL 4.0 assessment. For each participant, the
baseline value will be subtracted from the 6-month value. An independent samples t-test will
be used to compare this delta score between the cohort assigned to receive the positive
reinforcement response and the cohort assigned to receive the control response. For this
comparison, the normal distribution assumption of the delta score will be assessed using QQ
plots and outliers will be assessed using box plots. The homogeneity of variances assumption
will be assessed using Levene's test. If any parametric assumption is strongly violated, a
non-parametric Wilcoxon rank-sum test may be used to compare ranked PedsQL 4.0 scores between
the two cohorts. All analyses will be completed using SAS version 9.4 (Cary, NC) by a
Biostatistician in the Clinical Research Office.
Safety Monitoring Plan:
There are no adverse events that could be associated with text messages the investigators
will send to the participants. The investigators will send these text messages on Monday
early evening between the 5pm to 6pm. The investigators chose this time because participants
will not be in school and are unlikely to be driving or doing activities that the
participants could be distracted from when receiving the text, which could cause harm.
If there is an adverse effect, the investigators will ask the participants to notify the
principal investigator of the project. The investigators will review safety information once
a month.
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