Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Examining the Feasibility of Collaborative Care Treatment for Overweight Adolescents
This project will examine the effectiveness of a primary care based intervention to help overweight teen girls adopt healthy lifestyle practices. Participants will be adolescent females from Kaiser Permanente Northwest primary care clinics with a body mass index above the 90th percentile. Teens will be randomly assigned to (1) a behavioral weight control program (enriched intervention), (2) brief primary care counseling (low intensity intervention), or (3) usual-care (control). For both of the project's active intervention arms, teens' primary care providers will be given customized plans describing the teen's eating and physical activity habits and instructions on how to best work with these teens and their families. The behavioral weight control program will be specifically tailored for teen girls and will include separate group meetings for teens and parents, follow-up telephone contacts with their group leader, and coordinated feedback from the teen's primary care provider.
Overweight / obesity among youth has recently been declared a "public health crisis" in the
United States and other Western countries due to its alarming increase in prevalence
(Flegal, 1999; Kohn & Booth, 2003; Lobstein et al., 2004; Sokol, 2000). Over the past
decade, overweight in youth (Body mass index [BMI] > 95th percentile) has increased 4% for
school-age children, 6 - 11 years old. Adolescents, 12 - 19 years of age are even more
overweight (5%) (Ogden et al., 2002). Further, American adolescents had the highest
prevalence of overweight among 15 western countries included in a cross-sectional,
nationally representative school-based study (Lissau et al., 2004). Such trends are
particularly troubling given the psychosocial and physical health risks associated with
being overweight in childhood (Must & Strauss, 1999). Overweight among youth appears to
confer longer-term health risks even among later normative weight adults (Must et al.,
1992). Further, both longer-term health risks and the probability of adult obesity is
greater for overweight adolescents than for those developing weight problems earlier in
childhood (Must et al., 1992; Whitaker et al., 1997). Collectively, these factors suggest
adolescent weight control is an important public health priority.
Clinic-based weight control treatments for youth have demonstrated some success, however,
most empirically-supported interventions have been designed for younger school-age children
and their families (see Epstein et al., 1998 for a review). Even though a large volume of
research explores adult-weight control (see NIH-NHLBI, 1998 for a review) and (though more
limited) substantial research examines childhood obesity (see Epstein et al., 1998 for a
review), obesity treatments for adolescents have not been adequately studied. Furthermore,
almost all empirically tested weight control interventions among youth have been based in
academic research clinics rather than the primary care medical settings, in which weight
problems among these youth are most often identified and, arguably, in which they could be
most efficiently treated. Placing adolescent weight-related interventions within primary
medical care settings could make such interventions both more cost-effective and easier to
disseminate. The purpose of this study is to assess the feasibility, acceptability, relative
cost, and efficacy of a collaborative primary care-based behavioral lifestyle intervention
(Enriched Intervention - EI) for overweight adolescent females and their families. This
multi-component intervention, adapted for gender and developmental stage, will include a
combination of assessment, group teen and parent sessions, individual telephone-based
coaching contact, and a distinct collaborative care component with follow-up visits to the
youth's primary care provider [PCP]. Further, we will compare the EI to a low intensity
intervention [LII] (assessment and information about healthy diet and activity, and
follow-up visits with the youth's PCP) and a usual care control condition.
We hypothesize that:
1. Adolescents participating in the Enriched Intervention (EI) will have a greater
decrease in BMI percentile scores than adolescents receiving the Low Intensity
Intervention (LII) or Usual Care.
2. Adolescent in EI will have improved healthy lifestyle skills (e.g., more physical
activity, less junk food and sodas) compared with those receiving LII or Usual Care.
3. Adolescents in EI will report higher psychosocial functioning and quality of life
outcomes than those receiving LII or Usual Care.
4. Neither intervention will result in increases in problematic eating or weight-related
behaviors or beliefs.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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