Davis Ann M, Darden Paul, Lancaster Brittany, Chang Di, Cushing Christopher C, Janicke David M, Lim Crystal S, Olalde Megan, Bullard Sarah, McCulloh Russell, Perry Danika, Pyles Lee, Staiano Amanda E, Serrano-Gonzalez Monica, Davis Deborah Winders, Jelalian Elissa
Department of Pediatrics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, United States.
Department of Family Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Science Center, Oklahoma City, OK, United States.
J Pediatr Psychol. 2025 Mar 1;50(3):280-288. doi: 10.1093/jpepsy/jsae110.
This ancillary study's purpose is to describe the relationship between dose of treatment and body mass index (BMI) outcomes in a tele-behavioral health program delivered in the IDeA States Pediatric Clinical Trials Network to children and their families living in rural communities.
Participants randomized to the intervention were able to receive 26 contact hours (15 hr of group sessions and 11 hr of individual sessions) of material focused on nutrition, physical activity, and behavioral caregiver training delivered via interactive televideo. Dose of the intervention received by child/caregiver dyads (n = 52) from rural areas was measured as contact hours. The total doses of group, individual, and total contact hours were analyzed, and generalized linear mixed models were utilized to determine how dose received impacted BMI outcomes.
The majority (64.4%) of participants received the target of at least 80% (20.8 hr) of the total intervention dose. Older children (9-11 years) achieved significantly less intervention dose than targeted (M = 19.7; p = .031); as did males (M = 17.2; p < .001), children who identified as Black (M = 17.8; p < .001), and children from Site 3 (M = 18.0; p < .001). Dose was not significantly related to BMI outcomes in children or caregivers.
As this study is underpowered and took place during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, results should be interpreted with caution, but contact hours did not predict health outcomes for families living in rural communities.
本辅助研究旨在描述在“改善各州学术能力(IDeA)儿科临床试验网络”为农村社区儿童及其家庭提供的远程行为健康项目中,治疗剂量与体重指数(BMI)结果之间的关系。
随机分配至干预组的参与者能够通过交互式电视视频接受26个接触小时(15小时的小组课程和11小时的个人课程),内容聚焦于营养、体育活动和照顾者行为训练。来自农村地区的儿童/照顾者二元组(n = 52)接受的干预剂量以接触小时数来衡量。分析了小组、个人及总接触小时数的总剂量,并使用广义线性混合模型来确定所接受的剂量如何影响BMI结果。
大多数(64.4%)参与者接受了至少80%(20.8小时)的总干预剂量目标。年龄较大的儿童(9 - 11岁)所接受的干预剂量显著低于目标剂量(M = 19.7;p = 0.031);男性(M = 17.2;p < 0.001)、自认为是黑人的儿童(M = 17.8;p < 0.001)以及来自站点3的儿童(M = 18.0;p < 0.001)也是如此。剂量与儿童或照顾者的BMI结果无显著相关性。
由于本研究的样本量不足且是在新冠疫情早期进行的,结果应谨慎解读,但接触小时数并不能预测农村社区家庭的健康结果。