Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trial
— CTSIOfficial title:
Developing Novel Methods to Teach Children to Recognize Internal Signals of Hunger and Fullness
Verified date | January 2021 |
Source | Penn State University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this multi-year project is to develop an evidence-based curriculum for teaching preschool children to eat in response to internal hunger and fullness signals. There are currently no validated methods for teaching children these basic skills, despite the fact that doing so is necessary to prevent the development of obesity.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 64 |
Est. completion date | November 2, 2018 |
Est. primary completion date | November 2, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 4 Years to 5 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Children must be between the ages of 4-5 years-old at the time they participate in the study. - All children will be physically healthy, with no food allergies. Parents are asked if the child has any medical problems or is taking any prescription medication. If the answer to either of these questions is yes but the medical problem (or medication) is not severe nor has the potential to affect the study outcome, as judged by our PI, then the child may be included. - The person primarily responsible for feeding the child must be able to make nine, two-hour visits along with the child to the lab within an nine-week time period. Exclusion Criteria: - Child is younger than 4 or older than 6. - Child is not physically healthy. Parents are asked if the child has any medical problems or is taking any prescription medication. If the medical problem (or medication) is severe or may affect the study outcome, as judged by our PI, then the child may be excluded. - Child has food allergies. - Person primarily responsible for feeding child and child cannot make nine, 90 minute - 2 hour visits along with the child within a 9-week period. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | The Pennsylvania State University | University Park | Pennsylvania |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Penn State University |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Child Age | Child age in months. | Baseline | |
Primary | Energy Compensation measured by compensation score. | Children's ability to compensate for calories in a first course will be assessed by measurement of compensation score. The Compensation Score will be measured over two baseline lab sessions where children are served a low-energy drink (~3 calories) or a high-energy drink (150 calories), followed 25-30 minutes later by a buffet test-meal consisting of the common foods listed above. | Change from baseline to 9 weeks later. | |
Primary | Eating in the Absence of Hunger after a buffet meal: Food Intake weighed in grams and calories. | Children's intake (grams and calories) of tasty snacks when not hungry (eating in the absence of hunger). This measurement is taken after a buffet meal is served. | Change from baseline to 9 weeks later. | |
Primary | Energy intake at a buffet meal | Measured at an objective laboratory test meal (kcal and grams) | Change from baseline to 9 weeks later | |
Primary | Nutrition knowledge test for children | Age appropriate nutrition questions, with questions such as: 1) What body parts are involved with digestion? 2) Why do we eat? 3) Why do we stop eating? 4) What happens when we eat too much? and 5) Simulation of eating just the right amount using a computer game. | Change from baseline to 9 weeks later | |
Secondary | Liking of foods | Ratings of how much a child likes specific foods used in the study test meals, completed on visual analog scales. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Wanting of foods | Ratings of how much a child wants to eat specific foods used in the study test meals, completed on visual analog scales. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Fullness feelings | Ratings of how full the child feels on a child friendly visual analog scale. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Height | Height in m measured by a stadiometer. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Weight | Weight in kg by standard digital scale. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Body mass index | Calculated from height and weight (kg/m^2) | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | BMI percentile | Calculated from height, weight, age, sex | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | BMI z-score | Calculated from height, weight, age, sex | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire of habitual eating styles in children. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Pubertal development Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire | Baseline | |
Secondary | Family demographics | Parent-reported questionnaire | Baseline | |
Secondary | Child feeding Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire of feeding strategies. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Infant Feeding Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire of infant feeding. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Child Behavior | Parent-reported questionnaire of child behavior. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Parent Eating Competence | Parent-reported questionnaire of parent eating competence. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Division of Responsibility in Child Feeding Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire of division of responsibility in child feeding | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Nutrition Steps Questionnaire | Standardized nutrition questionnaire. | Baseline and 9 weeks later. | |
Secondary | Caregiver Feeding Style Questionnaire | Parent-reported questionnaire of caregiver feeding style | Baseline and 9 weeks later. |
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