Lancaster Brittany, Goldenberg Elana, Trofimoff Anna S, Dai Yuchen, Forseth Bethany, Romine Rebecca Swinburne, Fleming Kandace, Davis Ann
Center for Children's Healthy Lifestyles & Nutrition.
School of Medicine, University of Kansas Medical Center.
Health Psychol. 2025 May 29. doi: 10.1037/hea0001518.
This study explores the impact of iAmHealthy, a rurally focused pediatric obesity intervention, on mental health outcomes and examines how baseline mental health affects body mass index (BMI) outcomes for child-parent dyads in rural communities.
Eighteen schools were randomly assigned to iAmHealthy or the Newsletter Control group. iAmHealthy consists of health coaching and group sessions via televideo. Child and parent height and weight, child depression, child quality of life, and parent distress were assessed at baseline, posttreatment (8 months), and follow-up (20 months) from October 2017 to December 2021. Multilevel modeling assessed treatment effects on mental health and baseline mental health on change in BMI outcomes.
In total, 148 dyads were randomized to iAmHealthy ( = 64) or control ( = 84). Dyads broadly reported minimal parent distress, child depressive symptoms, and high child quality of life. While there was no treatment group by time interactions, the iAmHealthy group had significant decreases in child depression at posttreatment and follow-up and significant decreases in parent distress at follow-up. Control participants had no significant changes in child depression, quality of life, or parent distress at any time point. Significant interactions between treatment group and baseline mental health predicted child body mass index z score/parent BMI change.
Parents experiencing baseline distress particularly benefited from the support of iAmHealthy, but unsustained effects at follow-up suggest that long-term support may be beneficial to these families. Future studies examining populations with heightened mental health challenges may provide deeper insights into how pediatric obesity interventions affect mental well-being within families from rural communities. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
本研究探讨以农村为重点的儿童肥胖干预措施“我很健康”对心理健康结果的影响,并研究基线心理健康如何影响农村社区儿童-家长二元组的体重指数(BMI)结果。
18所学校被随机分配到“我很健康”组或通讯对照组。“我很健康”包括通过电视视频进行的健康指导和小组课程。在2017年10月至2021年12月的基线、治疗后(8个月)和随访(20个月)时,评估儿童和家长的身高、体重、儿童抑郁、儿童生活质量以及家长的困扰程度。多水平模型评估治疗对心理健康的影响以及基线心理健康对BMI结果变化的影响。
总共148个二元组被随机分配到“我很健康”组(n = 64)或对照组(n = 84)。二元组总体报告家长困扰程度最低、儿童抑郁症状最少且儿童生活质量较高。虽然没有治疗组与时间的交互作用,但“我很健康”组在治疗后和随访时儿童抑郁显著降低,随访时家长困扰显著降低。对照组参与者在任何时间点的儿童抑郁、生活质量或家长困扰均无显著变化。治疗组与基线心理健康之间的显著交互作用预测了儿童体重指数z评分/家长BMI的变化。
经历基线困扰的家长尤其从“我很健康”的支持中受益,但随访时效果未持续,这表明长期支持可能对这些家庭有益。未来针对心理健康挑战加剧人群的研究可能会更深入地了解儿童肥胖干预措施如何影响农村社区家庭的心理健康。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)