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一项针对母亲的社交媒体同伴群体干预措施,以预防肥胖并促进婴儿期健康成长:开发与试点试验

A Social Media Peer Group Intervention for Mothers to Prevent Obesity and Promote Healthy Growth from Infancy: Development and Pilot Trial.

作者信息

Gruver Rachel S, Bishop-Gilyard Chanelle T, Lieberman Alexandra, Gerdes Marsha, Virudachalam Senbagam, Suh Andrew W, Kalra Gurpreet K, Magge Sheela N, Shults Justine, Schreiner Mark S, Power Thomas J, Berkowitz Robert I, Fiks Alexander G

机构信息

Division of General Pediatrics, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, United States.

出版信息

JMIR Res Protoc. 2016 Aug 2;5(3):e159. doi: 10.2196/resprot.5276.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Evidence increasingly indicates that childhood obesity prevention efforts should begin as early as infancy. However, few interventions meet the needs of families whose infants are at increased obesity risk due to factors including income and maternal body mass index (BMI). Social media peer groups may offer a promising new way to provide these families with the knowledge, strategies, and support they need to adopt obesity prevention behaviors.

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this study is to develop and pilot test a Facebook-based peer group intervention for mothers, designed to prevent pediatric obesity and promote health beginning in infancy.

METHODS

We conducted in-depth semi-structured interviews with 29 mothers of infants and focus groups with 30 pediatric clinicians, to inform the development of a theory-based intervention. We then conducted a single-group pilot trial with 8 mothers to assess its feasibility and acceptability. All participants were recruited offline at pediatric primary care practices. Participants in the pilot trial joined a private Facebook group, moderated by a psychologist, with a weekly video-based curriculum, and also had the option to meet at a face-to-face event. Within the Facebook group, mothers were encouraged to chat, ask questions, and share photos and videos of themselves and babies practicing healthy behaviors. Consistent with the literature on obesity prevention, the curriculum addressed infant feeding, sleep, activity, and maternal well-being. Feasibility was assessed using the frequency and content of group participation by mothers, and acceptability was measured using online surveys and phone interviews.

RESULTS

Based on preferences of mothers interviewed (mean BMI 35 kg/m(2), all Medicaid-insured, mean age 27, all Black), we designed the intervention to include frequent posts with new information, videos showing parents of infants demonstrating healthy behaviors, and an optional face-to-face meeting. We developed a privacy and safety plan that met the needs of participants as well as the requirements of the local institutional review board (IRB), which included use of a "secret" group and frequent screening of participant posts. Clinicians, 97% (29/30) women and 87% (26/30) pediatricians, preferred no direct involvement in the intervention, but were supportive of their patients' participation. In our 8-week, single group pilot trial, all participants (mean BMI 35 kg/m(2), all Medicaid-insured, mean age 28, all Black) viewed every weekly video post, and interacted frequently, with a weekly average of 4.4 posts/comments from each participant. All participant posts were related to parenting topics. Participants initiated conversations about behaviors related to healthy infant growth including solid food introduction, feeding volume, and managing stress. All 8 pilot group participants reported that they found the group helpful and would recommend it to others.

CONCLUSIONS

Our methodology was feasible and acceptable to low-income mothers of infants at high risk of obesity, and could be adapted to implement peer groups through social media for underserved populations in varied settings.

CLINICALTRIAL

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01977105; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01977105 (Archived by WebCite at http://www.webcitation.org/6iMFfOBat).

摘要

背景

越来越多的证据表明,儿童肥胖预防工作应早在婴儿期就开始。然而,由于包括收入和母亲体重指数(BMI)等因素,很少有干预措施能满足婴儿肥胖风险增加的家庭的需求。社交媒体同伴群体可能为向这些家庭提供他们采取肥胖预防行为所需的知识、策略和支持提供一种有前景的新方式。

目的

本研究的目的是开发并试点测试一种针对母亲的基于Facebook的同伴群体干预措施,旨在从婴儿期开始预防儿童肥胖并促进健康。

方法

我们对29名婴儿母亲进行了深入的半结构化访谈,并与30名儿科临床医生进行了焦点小组讨论,以为基于理论的干预措施的开发提供信息。然后,我们对8名母亲进行了单组试点试验,以评估其可行性和可接受性。所有参与者均在儿科初级保健机构线下招募。试点试验的参与者加入了一个由心理学家主持的私人Facebook群组,该群组有基于视频的每周课程,并且他们也可以选择参加面对面活动。在Facebook群组中,鼓励母亲们聊天、提问,并分享自己和婴儿践行健康行为的照片和视频。与肥胖预防文献一致,该课程涉及婴儿喂养、睡眠、活动和母亲的幸福感。通过母亲们参与群组的频率和内容来评估可行性,并通过在线调查和电话访谈来衡量可接受性。

结果

根据接受访谈的母亲们的偏好(平均BMI为35kg/m²,均为医疗补助参保者,平均年龄27岁,均为黑人),我们将干预措施设计为包括频繁发布新信息、展示践行健康行为的婴儿父母的视频,以及一次可选的面对面会议。我们制定了一项隐私和安全计划,该计划满足了参与者的需求以及当地机构审查委员会(IRB)的要求,其中包括使用“秘密”群组并对参与者的帖子进行频繁筛选。临床医生中,97%(29/30)的女性和87%(26/30)的儿科医生不希望直接参与干预,但支持他们的患者参与。在我们为期8周的单组试点试验中,所有参与者(平均BMI为35kg/m²,均为医疗补助参保者,平均年龄28岁,均为黑人)观看了每一个每周视频帖子,并频繁互动,每位参与者每周平均发布4.4条帖子/评论。所有参与者的帖子均与育儿主题相关。参与者发起了关于与健康婴儿成长相关行为的对话,包括固体食物引入、喂养量和压力管理。所有8名试点组参与者均表示他们觉得该群组很有帮助,并会向其他人推荐。

结论

我们的方法对于肥胖高风险的低收入婴儿母亲来说是可行且可接受的,并且可以进行调整,以便通过社交媒体为不同环境中服务不足的人群实施同伴群体干预。

临床试验

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01977105;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01977105(由WebCite存档于http://www.webcitation.org/6iMFfOBat)

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/bdd3/4987492/eff9a91891e6/resprot_v5i3e159_fig1.jpg

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