Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Working With Parents to Prevent Childhood Obesity: A Primary Care-based Study
Childhood obesity is an urgent public health issue. Roughly one-quarter of Canadian children
are overweight, putting them at risk for chronic diseases. Because most families access
health services in primary care, it is an ideal venue for obesity prevention. Specifically,
programs in primary care can prevent unhealthy weight gain in healthy weight children
(primary prevention) AND reduce unhealthy weight gain in children who are already overweight
(secondary prevention). Parents play a key role in children's health, so it is vital to
include parents in strategies to prevent childhood obesity.
The following objectives of this study are to: (i) develop a web-based, brief program for
parents as an educational tool to motivate parents to support healthy lifestyles in
children, and access community resources and health services that can prevent childhood
obesity; (ii) assess the acceptability of the program using focus groups with parents, and
pediatric-focused health care professionals, trainees, and administrators; and (iii) recruit
parents (n=200) in primary care and collect data at baseline and 1-month follow-up to
explore if the program led to changes in parents' motivation to support their children's
lifestyle habits, and families' use of resources and health services to prevent childhood
obesity.
It is hypothesized that the developed screening, brief intervention, and referral to
treatment (SBIRT) will (i) encourage parents of healthy weight children to seek resources to
eat healthfully and be physically active to maintain their weight status (primary [1°]
prevention), and (ii) guide parents of unhealthy weight children to access educational tools
and community services to reduce their child's obesity and associated health risks
(secondary [2°] prevention).
By providing families with tailored feedback, practical educational tools, and information
on local health services, this research will help to address oft-cited barriers primary care
clinicians commonly report when providing effective obesity-related health services, and
encourage family self-management of obesity-related behaviors.
Background: There is urgent need to develop and evaluate innovative, evidence-based, and
sustainable approaches for pediatric obesity in accessible settings. One such approach, the
screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment (SBIRT), has been used to address
preventable health concerns, such as hazardous drinking; this time- and resource-limited
approach delivers a brief, theoretically-driven intervention to increase awareness of a
health concern and provides the respondent with feedback and information on relevant
resources. This approach is suited to obesity prevention as it can enhance parents'
awareness and concern for children's lifestyle behaviors, remove social barriers and provide
anonymity for families, and overcome limited availability of obesity-related health
services.
Setting. This study will take place at a centrally-located Edmonton pediatric clinic housed
within the Edmonton Oliver Primary Care Network (EOPCN). Primary care (PC) represents an
accessible, relevant, and appropriate venue to prevent pediatric obesity because (i) PC
often represents families' first point of contact with the health care system, (ii) the
goals and priorities of PC clinics are well-aligned with primary and secondary prevention of
chronic diseases, and (iii) patients typically access health care services throughout the
life course, therefore representing a suitable environment to capture longitudinal data.
Phase I. The objective of this phase is to develop a web-based, theoretically-driven SBIRT
to enhance parents' awareness, concern for, and motivation to support children's lifestyle
behaviors. The SBIRT (RIPPLE; the Resource Information Program for Parents on Lifestyle and
Education) will screen children of all weight statuses, deliver a brief intervention
regarding children's lifestyle behaviors to parents, and provide parents with a menu of
resources and community resources to facilitate the prevention of obesity in children. The
intervention has been informed by the Norm Activation Model, and a survey following the
intervention will test psychosocial constructs from the Theory of Planned Behavior and
Health Belief Model. Parents will receive a personalized report based on their intervention
responses and selected resources and services; parents will have the option to email this
report to themselves.
Phase II. The objective of this phase is to refine the SBIRT using focus groups.
Participants (n=30) will include parents, and pediatric-focused administrators, health care
providers, research coordinators, and graduate trainees. Focus groups will query
participants' overall perceptions of the program; specifically, impressions regarding
likability, acceptability, satisfaction, and feasibility of incorporating the intervention
into clinical practice. Focus group discussions will be transcribed in real-time using a
court reporter, which will optimize transcription accuracy and ensure confidentiality. The
method of Qualitative Description (QD) will be used to develop a rich and explicit
description of the phenomena. QD necessitates less interpretive interference on behalf of
the researcher, therefore representing an accurate and realistic embodiment of participants'
discussion.
Phase III (RCT). The objective of this phase is to recruit parents (n=200) from a pediatric
primary care clinic to enroll in the RCT. This double-blinded, parallel-design RCT will
adhere to CONSORT guidelines. The allocation sequence will be electronically generated and
blocked randomization (5 arms; block size of five) will be used to ensure equal group sizes
throughout the study. Research assistants will be blinded to participants' intervention
assignment and participants will not be aware if they have received the intervention or
control.
Parents will be eligible for the study if they speak and read English, and have a 5 - 17
year old child who is present at the appointment with a non-urgent medical issue. Data will
be collected at (i) baseline during delivery of the online RCT and (ii) 1-month follow-up to
assess time-related changes in parents' psychosocial constructs (e.g., intention to change
children's lifestyle behaviors; primary outcome) and families' utilization of resources and
health services to facilitate healthy lifestyle behaviors (secondary outcome). Follow-up
will include email delivery of a survey measure identical to that administered at baseline.
Given rates of attrition tend to increase over time parents' access to the online
personalized report will serve as a proxy of participation if the online survey is not
completed.
Continuous variables will be described by univariate summaries; frequency distributions will
be determined for categorical variables. Participant characteristics (e.g., weight status,
child sex) will be examined to assess equivalence of intervention groups at baseline, and
attrition tendencies across sub-groups will be examined using two-way ANOVA. Multilevel
modelling will be used to assess intra- and inter-level individual and group change in the
primary and secondary outcomes; this form of analysis is appropriate when observations are
nested within groups and/or multiple time points. Estimates of effect sizes will be based on
percent change in primary outcomes. Significance will be p<0.05.
Significance & Future Directions. The SBIRT is designed to encourage self-management by
providing families with tailored feedback and linking them with appropriate and relevant
resources to facilitate children's healthy lifestyle behaviors. Findings from this study
will inform future intervention refinement and implementation into everyday clinical
practice.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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