Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
BMC Public Health. 2010 May 24;10:271. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-271.
Because parental recognition of overweight in young children is poor, we need to determine how best to inform parents that their child is overweight in a way that enhances their acceptance and supports motivation for positive change. This study will assess 1) whether weight feedback delivered using motivational interviewing increases parental acceptance of their child's weight status and enhances motivation for behaviour change, and 2) whether a family-based individualised lifestyle intervention, delivered primarily by a MInT mentor with limited support from "expert" consultants in psychology, nutrition and physical activity, can improve weight outcomes after 12 and 24 months in young overweight children, compared with usual care.
METHODS/DESIGN: 1500 children aged 4-8 years will be screened for overweight (height, weight, waist, blood pressure, body composition). Parents will complete questionnaires on feeding practices, physical activity, diet, parenting, motivation for healthy lifestyles, and demographics. Parents of children classified as overweight (BMI > or = CDC 85th) will receive feedback about the results using Motivational interviewing or Usual care. Parental responses to feedback will be assessed two weeks later and participants will be invited into the intervention. Additional baseline measurements (accelerometry, diet, quality of life, child behaviour) will be collected and families will be randomised to Tailored package or Usual care. Parents in the Usual care condition will meet once with an advisor who will offer general advice regarding healthy eating and activity. Parents in the Tailored package condition will attend a single session with an "expert team" (MInT mentor, dietitian, physical activity advisor, clinical psychologist) to identify current challenges for the family, develop tailored goals for change, and plan behavioural strategies that best suit each family. The mentor will continue to provide support to the family via telephone and in-person consultations, decreasing in frequency over the two-year intervention. Outcome measures will be obtained at baseline, 12 and 24 months.
This trial offers a unique opportunity to identify effective ways of providing feedback to parents about their child's weight status and to assess the efficacy of a supportive, individualised early intervention to improve weight outcomes in young children.
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12609000749202.
由于父母对幼儿超重的认识较差,我们需要确定如何最好地告知父母他们的孩子超重,以增强他们的接受程度并支持他们积极改变的动机。本研究将评估 1)使用动机访谈提供体重反馈是否会增加父母对孩子体重状况的接受程度,并增强他们改变行为的动机,以及 2)以家庭为基础的个体化生活方式干预,主要由 MInT 导师提供,并在心理学、营养和身体活动方面有限地得到“专家”顾问的支持,是否可以在 12 个月和 24 个月后改善年轻超重儿童的体重结果,与常规护理相比。
方法/设计:将对 1500 名 4-8 岁的超重儿童(身高、体重、腰围、血压、身体成分)进行筛查。父母将完成有关喂养习惯、体育活动、饮食、育儿、健康生活方式动机以及人口统计学的问卷。被归类为超重的儿童(BMI≥CDC 第 85 百分位)的父母将使用动机访谈或常规护理收到有关结果的反馈。两周后将评估父母对反馈的反应,参与者将被邀请进入干预组。将收集额外的基线测量值(加速度计、饮食、生活质量、儿童行为),并对家庭进行随机分组,接受定制套餐或常规护理。在常规护理条件下的父母将与顾问会面一次,提供有关健康饮食和活动的一般建议。在定制套餐条件下的父母将与一个“专家团队”(MInT 导师、营养师、体育活动顾问、临床心理学家)进行一次会议,以确定家庭当前面临的挑战,为改变制定量身定制的目标,并计划最适合每个家庭的行为策略。导师将通过电话和面对面咨询继续为家庭提供支持,在两年的干预过程中逐渐减少频率。将在基线、12 个月和 24 个月时获得结果测量值。
这项试验提供了一个独特的机会,可以确定向父母提供有关其孩子体重状况的反馈的有效方法,并评估支持性个体化早期干预以改善幼儿体重结果的效果。
澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册 ACTRN12609000749202。