Department of Public Health Sciences, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, PO Box 800717, Charlottesville, VA 22908-0717. Email:
University of Virginia Cancer Center, Charlottesville, Virginia.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2017 Sep 28;14:E87. doi: 10.5888/pcd14.160421.
Few interventions have evaluated the influence of parent health literacy (HL) status on weight-related child outcomes. This study explores how parent HL affects the reach, attendance, and retention of and outcomes in a 3-month multicomponent family-based program to treat childhood obesity (iChoose).
This pre-post, quasiexperimental trial occurred in the Dan River Region, a federally designated medically underserved area. iChoose research protocol and intervention strategies were designed using an HL universal precautions approach. We used validated measures, standardized data collection techniques, and generalized linear mixed-effect parametric models to determine the moderation effect of parent HL on outcomes.
No significant difference in HL scores were found between parents who enrolled their child in the study and those who did not. Of 94 enrolled parents, 34% were low HL, 49% had an annual household income of less than $25,000, and 39% had a high school education or less. Of 101 enrolled children, 60% were black, and the mean age was 9.8 (standard deviation, 1.3) years. Children of parents with both low and high HL attended and were retained at similar rates. Likewise, parent HL status did not significantly influence improvements in effectiveness outcomes (eg, child body mass index [BMI] z scores, parent BMI, diet and physical activity behaviors, quality of life), with the exception of child video game/computer screen time; low HL decreased and high HL increased screen time (coefficient = 0.52, standard error, 0.11, P < .001).
By incorporating design features that attended to the HL needs of parents, children of parents with low HL engaged in and benefited from a family-based childhood obesity treatment program similar to children of parents with high HL.
很少有干预措施评估父母健康素养(HL)状况对与体重相关的儿童结果的影响。本研究探讨了父母 HL 如何影响为期三个月的多组分基于家庭的儿童肥胖治疗计划(iChoose)的参与率、出席率、保留率和结果。
这项前后准实验性试验发生在丹河地区,这是一个联邦指定的医疗服务不足地区。iChoose 研究方案和干预策略是使用 HL 普遍预防方法设计的。我们使用了经过验证的措施、标准化的数据收集技术和广义线性混合效应参数模型来确定父母 HL 对结果的调节作用。
在参加研究的父母和未参加研究的父母之间,HL 分数没有显著差异。在 94 名入组的父母中,34%的父母 HL 较低,49%的父母家庭年收入低于 25000 美元,39%的父母只受过高中教育或以下。在 101 名入组的儿童中,60%是黑人,平均年龄为 9.8 岁(标准差为 1.3 岁)。父母 HL 较低和较高的儿童的出席率和保留率相似。同样,父母 HL 状况并没有显著影响有效性结果的改善(例如,儿童体重指数 [BMI] z 分数、父母 BMI、饮食和身体活动行为、生活质量),除了儿童视频游戏/电脑屏幕时间;低 HL 减少了而高 HL 增加了屏幕时间(系数=0.52,标准误差=0.11,P<.001)。
通过纳入关注父母 HL 需求的设计特点,父母 HL 较低的儿童参与并受益于基于家庭的儿童肥胖治疗计划,与父母 HL 较高的儿童相似。