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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Enrolling by invitation

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02669797
Other study ID # FMCH-2017-25964
Secondary ID
Status Enrolling by invitation
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date February 11, 2022
Est. completion date April 30, 2027

Study information

Verified date May 2024
Source University of Colorado, Denver
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The proposed study is a 12-month, individual randomized controlled trial (RCT). The main aim of the study is to decrease childhood obesity (BMI percentile, neck circumference) and improve child diet quality in children ages 5-10 years old by increasing family meal quality (i.e., dietary intake, interpersonal atmosphere) and quantity (i.e., frequency of family meals) via innovative technology (i.e., ecological momentary intervention (EMI), video feedback) and partnerships with primary care and Community Health Workers (CHWs).


Description:

The RCT has the following three arms: (1) Ecological Momentary Intervention (EMI); (2) EMI + HV + Video feedback (virtual); (3) EMI + HV + Video feedback (hybrid). Delivery of the intervention will last 6 months for each family, with a 6-month post-intervention evaluation visit. All arms will receive EMI family meal tips via smartphones for 16 weeks. Arms 2 and 3 will also receive 16 weeks of in-home training (arm 2 will be virtual, arm 3 will be hybrid virtual/in-home), with 8 weeks (every other week) in-home education visits with a CHW focused on family meal quality and quantity and a family meal preparation activity and 8 weeks "Try it Yourself" activities that reinforce the messages and skills taught by a CHW. Additionally, Arms 2 and 3 will receive video feedback from family's video-recorded family meals by a CHW focusing on family behaviors related to family meal quality and quantity. (EMI, in-home training, and video-feedback will occur during the same 16-week period.) After families have completed 16 weeks of the intervention, a 8-week maintenance phase will ensue. Having a maintenance phase is an evidence-based intervention component and will provide incrementally less support to families to build self-efficacy and increase sustainability of new behaviors. Over time, participants will receive less study support to evaluate if participants have internalized healthful behaviors. During the maintenance phase EMI meal tips will be reduced to only the days in which parents report their highest stress levels for all arms. The study will last 12 months, with three assessment time points including, baseline, 6 months (i.e., post-intervention) and 12 months. Children ages 5-10 and family members (i.e., parent/primary caregiver, siblings) from low-income and diverse households (i.e., African American, Asian, Hispanic, Native American, White) - who are at high risk for obesity - will be recruited for the study. Theory informs the intervention study design, research questions and related hypotheses, methods, measurement, and analysis. Family Systems Theory drives the decision to direct the intervention at the "family unit" to increase the likelihood of individual and family-level weight and weight-related behavior change and sustainability. Additionally, partnerships with existing community-based healthcare systems and CHWs will be utilized to reach participants in community settings where they have existing relationships and resources. This study utilizes innovative and research-informed intervention components (i.e., in-home visiting, EMI, video-feedback) to increase the likelihood of intervention effectiveness and sustainability. The "Family Matters" study will be carried out across two Phases, an R61 Phase and an R33 Phase. Specific aims for each Phase are described below: Specific Aims for the R61 Phase: • Aim 1 (Primary Outcomes): Conduct a three-arm RCT comparing EMI, EMI+HV, and EMI+HV+Video Feedback in diverse children ages 5-10 and their families to test the hypotheses that: Hypothesis 1: BMI percentile and neck circumference will decrease and diet quality will increase in children in the EMI+HV+Video Feedback hybrid arm compared to children in the EMI or virtual-only arms. • Aim 2 (Secondary Outcomes): Examine intervention effects on familial, parental, and sibling factors. Hypothesis 1: Family meal quality and quantity will increase in households with children in the EMI+HV+ Video Feedback hybrid arm compared to children in the EMI or virtual arms. Hypothesis 2: Controlling feeding practices (e.g., restriction) will decrease and coping skills will increase in parents in the EMI+HV+Video Feedback hybrid arm compared to parents in the EMI or virtual arms. Hypothesis 3: BMI percentile will decrease in siblings in the EMI+HV+Video Feedback hybrid arm compared to siblings in the EMI or virtual arms. • Aim 3: Examine cost effectiveness and feasibility of intervention implementation in primary care. Hypothesis 1: The BMI z-score and neck circumference reduction resulting from the intervention will be cost-effective.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Enrolling by invitation
Enrollment 500
Est. completion date April 30, 2027
Est. primary completion date September 30, 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 5 Years to 10 Years
Eligibility STUDY INCLUSION CRITERIA The inclusionary criteria used to select participants for the proposed study includes: 1. Boys and girls (n=500) ages 5-10 years old who attend a University of Minnesota Physicians (n=4) or Fairview (n=8) primary care clinic and their primary caregiver (e.g., mother, father, grandparent) and at least one sibling. A second primary caregiver and other family members can also participate. 2. Must eat =3 family dinner meals per week. Research shows that youth who have more than three family meals per week are less likely to be obese ten years later. Thus, families who report three or fewer family meals per week will be recruited to optimize the potential for change in family meal frequency. Families will focus on the family dinner in the intervention to improve their family meal quality and quantity. This decision is based on: (1) Family Systems Theory, which indicates that change in one setting (e.g., family dinner) will generalize to other settings (e.g., breakfast, lunch, snacks). 3. Child with age and sex adjusted BMI =75th percentile (no upper limit). 4. One of the following race/ethnicities: African American, Asian, Hispanic/Latino, Native American, Asian American, or White. In order to examine racial/ethnic differences in study hypotheses, equal numbers of children per racial/ethnic group (total=500) will be recruited. 5. Parent and family members who speak English or Spanish. 6. Not expected to move within the next two years. STUDY EXCLUSION CRITERIA The exclusionary criteria used to exclude participants from the proposed study includes: 1. Children with medically necessary dietary restrictions (reviewed by MD from primary care clinics). 2. Non-custodial parents, who the child does not live with more than 50% of the time.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
In-home Visits and Food Preparation Activities
Families will participate in eight in-home education activities. The visits will focus on family meal quality (dietary, interpersonal) and quantity (meal frequency) factors found in prior studies to be associated with child weight and weight-related behaviors. Eight of the visits (every other week) will be delivered by a CHW and will last 90 minutes. Additionally ,a family meal food preparation activity will occur to help support families in learning skills to increase family meal quality and quantity. On weeks opposite of the in-home education visits with a CHW, families will be given a "Try it Yourself" activity to reinforce the messages (e.g., use family meals as a family connection time) and skills (e.g., recipe that requires families to steam vegetables) taught by the CHW during the in-home education visits.
Ecological Momentary Intervention
Parents will receive daily EMI messages regarding suggestions for increasing meal quality/quantity via a smartphone application, based on the stress level and source of stress they reported earlier in the day. Specifically, parents will receive two push notifications in the morning to report their stress level and type/source of stress (e.g., work, children, finances). Then, based on the reported stress level and source of stress, parents will be texted tips/ideas for carrying out a nutritionally and emotionally healthful family meal the same night, in the face of stress. If parents report no stress on their EMI measure earlier in the day, they will be provided with a menu of options regarding what type of meal tip they would prefer later in the day (e.g., recipe ideas, meal prep tips, mealtime conversation starters. Parents will be able to respond to the EMI messages indicating preferred tips so that EMI tips become more meaningful/relevant to the needs of each family.
Feedback on Video-recorded Family Meals
Parents will video-record and upload via their cellphone one family meal every other week, which will be watched by intervention staff. Using Motivational Interviewing, CHWs will give specific feedback on how to adapt negative mealtime behaviors and provide reinforcement for positive behaviors seen in the videos, based on a validated interpersonal coding tool called the Iowa Family Interaction Rating Scales (IFIRS). Additionally, feedback will be given on the dietary healthfulness of the meal, based on a validated coding tool called the Healthfulness of Meal Index (HOM). After feedback, family members will be taught specific skills to improve their family meal processes and behaviors that vary from food preparation skills, to increasing healthful food options at meals, or role-playing family interactions to improve the emotional atmosphere at the meal. Families will also set SMART goals at each visit regarding family meal quality and quantity.
Maintenance
After 16 weeks, EMI family meal tips for all arms will be reduced to only the days in which parent's report their highest stress levels. Stress profiles will be created for each parent in order to tailor the EMI family meals tips to days in which they experience their highest levels of stress. For example, during the 16-weeks of EMI, a parent may report their highest stress levels on Tuesdays and Thursdays. The stress profile that would be created for the parent during the maintenance phase would include receiving text messages only on Tuesdays and Thursdays. The parent would then receive these EMI family meal tips only on Tuesdays and Thursdays throughout the 8-week maintenance phase..

Locations

Country Name City State
United States University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus Aurora Colorado
United States Department of Family Medicine and Community Health Minneapolis Minnesota

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Colorado, Denver National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Child BMI percentile Based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines, child age and sex will be used to calculate an adjusted BMI percentiles. Measured at three time points over 12 months by study staff. 12-months post-baseline
Primary Child Dietary Quality Child three-day, 24-hour dietary recalls will be used to calculate a Healthy Eating Index (HEI) score, which measures overall dietary quality. 12-months post-baseline
Primary Child Neck Circumference Measured neck circumference on child 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Family Meal Quantity Family meal frequency as measured by a self-report survey item at three time points over 12 months. 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Family Meal Dietary Healthfulness Family meal dietary quality as measured by the Healthfulness of Meal (HOM) index via video-recorded direct observation at three time points over 12 months. 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Family Meal Emotional Atmosphere Quality Family meal emotional atmosphere quality as measured by the Iowa Family Interaction Rating Scales (IFIRS) via video-recorded direct observation at three time points over 12 months. 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Sibling BMI percentile Based on Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines, sibling age and sex will be used to calculate an adjusted BMI percentiles. Measured at four time points over 12 months by study staff. 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Parent Feeding Practices Parent feeding practices (e.g., restriction, pressure-to-eat) will be measured at three time points over a 12-month period using validated measures in EMA surveys. 12-months post-baseline
Secondary Parent Coping Skills Parent coping (i.e., ability to manage stress) will be measured at three time over a 12-month period using validated measures in EMA surveys. 12-months post-baseline
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