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Clinical Trials/NCT05802160
NCT05802160
Recruiting
N/A

A Good Start Matters for Parents and Children: an MHealth Parenting Intervention to Promote a Healthy Child Development

University of British Columbia1 site in 1 country118 target enrollmentApril 1, 2023

Overview

Phase
N/A
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Parenting Practices
Sponsor
University of British Columbia
Enrollment
118
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change in Parenting practices (parent outcome)
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
last year

Overview

Brief Summary

Early childhood is an important period where the family can support the development and maintenance of healthy eating and active behaviors to prevent or reduce childhood obesity. With this ultimate goal, we designed the Good Start Matters - Parenting program, which aims to engage families in positive parenting practices that support healthy child behaviors, and aim to evaluate the efficacy of this intervention with a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT). The Good Start Matters - Parenting program is a 2-month mobile-Health (mHealth) parenting intervention which promote positive parenting (primary outcome) and support children's healthy nutrition, physical activity, and decrease screen-time (secondary outcomes).

Detailed Description

Early childhood is an important learning period where dietary, physical activity and sedentary habits are forming, and developing unhealthy habits will set children up for obesity and other health risks later in life. Moreover, during early childhood the familial environment plays a key role in shaping children's behaviors through their parenting practices, which altogether illustrate the potential of the early years as a developmental period with opportunities for obesity prevention. This Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) evaluates the efficacy of the Good Start Matters - Parenting intervention, a mobile-Health (mHealth) aimed at improving parenting and co-parenting practices and child health behaviors among British Columbian families of preschoolers. Participating families complete measurement tools at baseline and after 10 weeks. Families randomized into the intervention condition receive immediate access to the app, and control families receive access to the app after the completion of the second assessment. We expect that compared to control group families, intervention group families significantly improve their parenting and co-parenting practices and improve child health behaviors after 2 months of app use.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
April 1, 2023
End Date
April 2, 2025
Last Updated
last year
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Louise Masse

Professor, Principal Investigator

University of British Columbia

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Children must be:
  • Attending a childcare center invited to participate in the Good Start Matters study.
  • Older than 2.5 and younger than 6 years
  • Parents must:
  • Be the primary caregiver/legal guardian of an eligible child OR share childrearing responsibilities with an already enrolled primary caregiver/legal guardian of an eligible child
  • Be fluent in English
  • Have a cellphone number and smartphone device where they can receive text messages and download and access the app

Exclusion Criteria

  • Parents and children:
  • Currently participating in a pediatric weight management program or in a nutritional program are not eligible.
  • With severe dietary restrictions that limit their ability to follow general nutritional guidelines for toddlers and preschoolers are not eligible.
  • With severe physical limitations that limit their ability to follow general movement behavior guidelines for toddlers and preschoolers are not eligible.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change in Parenting practices (parent outcome)

Time Frame: Two time points (baseline and 10 weeks post intervention)

Questions adapted from the "Food and Physical Activity Item Banks" (Masse et al 2020) to specifically assess parenting practices related to food, physical activity and screen time. The scale ranges from 1-5 in most items, and higher scores indicate greater endorsement of each parenting practice.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Change in Eating and dietary behaviors (child outcome)(Two time points (baseline and 10 weeks post intervention))
  • Change in Co-Parenting practices (parent outcome)(Two time points (baseline and 10 weeks post intervention))
  • Change in Physical activity (child outcome)(Two time points (baseline and 10 weeks post intervention))
  • Change in Screen time (child outcome)(Two time points (baseline and 10 weeks post intervention))

Study Sites (1)

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