School of Psychology, Faculty of Health, Medicine, Nursing and Behavioural Sciences, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2010 Apr 28;10:220. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-220.
Developing effective prevention and intervention programs for the formative preschool years is seen as an essential step in combating the obesity epidemic across the lifespan. The overall goal of the current project is to measure the effectiveness of a healthy eating and childhood obesity prevention intervention, the MEND (Mind Exercise Nutrition Do It!) program that is delivered to parents of children aged 2-4 years.
METHODS/DESIGN: This randomised controlled trial will be conducted with 200 parents and their 2-4 year old children who attend the MEND 2-4 program in metropolitan and regional Victoria. Parent-child dyads will attend ten 90-minute group workshops. These workshops focus on general nutrition, as well as physical activity and behaviours. They are typically held at community or maternal and child health centres and run by a MEND 2-4 trained program leader. Child eating habits, physical activity levels and parental behaviours and cognitions pertaining to nutrition and physical activity will be assessed at baseline, the end of the intervention, and at 6 and 12 months post the intervention. Informed consent will be obtained from all parents, who will then be randomly allocated to the intervention or wait-list control group.
Our study is the first RCT of a healthy eating and childhood obesity prevention intervention targeted specifically to Australian parents and their preschool children aged 2-4 years. It responds to the call by experts in the area of childhood obesity and child health that prevention of overweight in the formative preschool years should focus on parents, given that parental beliefs, attitudes, perceptions and behaviours appear to impact significantly on the development of early overweight. This is 'solution-oriented' rather than 'problem-oriented' research, with its focus being on prevention rather than intervention. If this is a positive trial, the MEND2-4 program can be implemented as a national program.
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12610000200088.
在整个生命周期中,开发针对学前阶段的有效预防和干预计划被视为对抗肥胖流行的重要步骤。当前项目的总体目标是衡量一项针对 2-4 岁儿童家长的健康饮食和儿童肥胖预防干预措施——MEND(Mind Exercise Nutrition Do It!)计划的有效性,该计划针对的是参加 MEND 2-4 计划的 2-4 岁儿童的家长。
方法/设计:这项随机对照试验将在 200 名参加 MEND 2-4 计划的 2-4 岁儿童的家长及其子女中进行。父母-子女二人组将参加十次 90 分钟的小组研讨会。这些研讨会重点关注一般营养、身体活动和行为。它们通常在社区或母婴健康中心举行,由一名经过 MEND 2-4 培训的项目负责人主持。在基线、干预结束时以及干预后 6 个月和 12 个月,将评估儿童的饮食习惯、身体活动水平以及与营养和身体活动相关的父母行为和认知。将从所有家长那里获得知情同意,然后他们将被随机分配到干预组或候补名单对照组。
我们的研究是第一项针对特定于澳大利亚父母及其 2-4 岁学龄前儿童的健康饮食和儿童肥胖预防干预的 RCT。它回应了儿童肥胖和儿童健康领域专家的呼吁,即幼儿期超重的预防应侧重于父母,因为父母的信念、态度、看法和行为似乎对早期超重的发展有重大影响。这是“面向解决方案”而不是“面向问题”的研究,重点是预防而不是干预。如果这是一项积极的试验,MEND2-4 计划可以作为一项国家计划实施。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册 ACTRN12610000200088。