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Clinical Trial Summary

Physical inactivity in children is a major public health risk factor and a health objective for the nation. This study aims to investigate the short- and long-term effects of a movement and physical activity program - the Children Health and Motor Programs (CHAMP) on motor competence, perceived motor competence, and physical activity. A secondary aim of this project (i.e., Science of Behavior Change Administrative Supplement) is to examine the immediate (pre- to post-test) effects of the CHAMP intervention on self-regulation and associations between self-regulation and changes in motor competence, perceived motor competence, and physical activity. The long term goal is to provide evidence-based movement experiences during the early childhood years that promote and contribute to overall healthy growth and development.


Clinical Trial Description

Ethnic-minorities and low income children engage in less physical activity (PA)1 and, as a result, have an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Promoting health-enhancing and sustainable PA levels across childhood and adolescence in low income and minority populations provides important health benefits. However, most PA interventions in children have not led to long-term, sustainable PA behavior. We propose a potential limitation in PA interventions has been the lack of focus on critical developmental processes (i.e., motor development and psychological constructs including perceived competence) that are established correlates of PA and may strongly impact the long-term sustainability of children's PA behaviors. Co-investigator, Stodden et al. proposed a developmental model hypothesizing mechanisms that promote positive longitudinal change in PA from early (≈3 yrs) to late childhood (≈12 yrs). In this model, a causal pathway that impacts PA is the development of motor competence (MC, i.e., coordination and control of human movement) and perceived motor competence (PMC; i.e., perceptions of movement capabilities). PMC is directly linked to MC and influences PA as it mediates the relationship between MC and PA across childhood. Empirical evidence supports the model's hypotheses showing that MC, PMC, and PA are positively related across childhood. Principal Investigator, Robinson found that children as early as 3 yrs old demonstrate positive associations among MC, PMC, and PA, which suggests early childhood is an optimal time to promote positive MC and PMC in order to decrease the risk of developing unhealthy PA habits. Robinson has conceptualized and tested a theoretically grounded intervention (the Children's Health Activity Motor Program; CHAMP), which aligns with tenets of the Stodden et al. model by focusing on improving MC and PMC. Studies by the PI show highly impactful results on MC and PMC. CHAMP produced strong increases in MC (improvement to the 70th%tile, up from the 15th%tile) and PMC (30% improvement) over a 9-week intervention and results were sustained following a 12-week retention. During the 30-min intervention, CHAMP participants engaged in more PA (i.e., 50% more time) compared to children in the control.13 While these intervention results are very encouraging, there is a need to examine the long-term effects of the intervention on MC and PMC and whether improvements lead to sustained PA. To date, there have been no large-scale treatment studies that have examined the long-term effects of a MC and PA-based intervention on MC, PMC, and PA in young children. This proposed study will address these gaps utilizing a cluster randomized control trial. The CHAMP intervention will be implemented in a high minority and low-income population, namely Head Start preschoolers (N = 300; 3.5-5 yrs old), with a 3-year follow-up to examine the immediate (pre- to post-test) and sustained (across middle childhood) impact on MC, PMC, and daily PA. 30 classes of preschool children will be randomly assigned to either the treatment (CHAMP, n = 15) or control (normal preschool free-play/recess, n = 15) conditions. The CHAMP intervention will be implemented for 30 minutes/day, 4 days/week, for 30 weeks (dose of 3000 minutes). Measurements of MC (product and process), PMC (via self-perceptions of MC), and PA (via accelerometry), will occur at baseline (month 0), post-intervention (month 9), and follow-up at May of Year 2, 3, and 4. The specific aims of this study are to: Aim 1: Examine the immediate post-intervention effect of CHAMP (compared to control participants) on MC, PMC, and PA in preschool-age children. Aim 2: Assess the sustainable effect of CHAMP (compared to control participants) on MC, PMC, and PA across middle childhood. Aim 3: Examine and compare the immediate and long-term mediating effect of PMC on the relationship between MC and PA in preschool-age children in the CHAMP and control. IMPACT: Positive findings will support the development of early childhood education MC and PA programs that promote positive and sustainable PA behaviors that contribute to healthy growth and development. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03189862
Study type Interventional
Source University of Michigan
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date September 11, 2017
Completion date November 1, 2021

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