Healthy Children, Healthy Families: Parents Making A Difference: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Overview
- Phase
- N/A
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Childhood Obesity Prevention
- Sponsor
- Cornell University
- Enrollment
- 391
- Primary Endpoint
- Comprehensive Feeding Practices Questionnaire (CFPQ)
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 4 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
The impacts of Healthy Children, Healthy Families: Parents Making a Difference! (HCHF) on how low-income parents enrolled in the Expanded Food and Nutrition Education Program use effective parenting practices to influence children's healthy eating and active play behavior will be investigated, as compared to a delayed intervention control group.
Detailed Description
The Healthy Children, Healthy Families: Parents Making a Difference! (HCHF) curriculum is a Cornell curriculum for parents and caregivers focusing on the behaviors most likely to help children avoid unhealthy weight gain. These behaviors include drinking water or milk instead of sweetened beverages, eating more vegetables and fruits, playing actively, eating fewer high-fat and high-sugar foods, limiting screen time, and having sensible serving sizes. The 8-session curriculum uses a learner-centered dialogue approach, hands-on activities and role plays. The study will include 300 participants with young children 3-5 years old in Head Start and childcare programs in New York City using a randomized control design. In period 1 (9 weeks), half the groups will receive HCHF education (immediate education, IE) and half will serve as controls, receiving no education (delayed education, DE). In period 2 (9 weeks), DE will receive education; IE will receive no education and be followed longitudinally for periods 2 and 3. In period 3 (16 weeks), neither group will receive education and both will be followed longitudinally. Data will be collected at each time point using validated measures, including the HCHF Checklist developed by the investigators and complementary measures that assess parenting feeding practices, food behavior in parents, food behavior in children, and parent self-efficacy around obesity prevention behaviors. It is hypothesized that change pre- to post- HCHF will be greater than control groups, and changes in behavior will be retained post-education.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Parents/caregivers with young children 3-5 years old
Exclusion Criteria
- •Any person who does not have children who are 3-5 years old
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Comprehensive Feeding Practices Questionnaire (CFPQ)
Time Frame: up to 8 months
Six sub-scales (24 items) aligned with the learning objectives of the intervention, were selected from the original CFPQ. The constructs assessed by the sub-scales include encouraging balance and variety, use of food as reward, parent allowing child to control eating, parental modeling, parental pressure for child to consume more food, and home environment. Response options for 6 items include frequency on a Likert-type scale (never to always) and for 18 items include a Likert scale (strongly disagree to strongly agree). Each response is converted to a numeric value, 1 for the least desirable to 5 for the most desirable option. These values are then summed (range 0 - 120) and divided by the number of items with a response, resulting in a mean scale score range of 0 - 5. The items within each sub-scale are handled in the same way, with the sub-scale ranges of 0 - 5.
Healthy Children, Healthy Families Checklist
Time Frame: up to 8 months
The checklist is a 16-item instrument that assesses parents'/caregivers' parenting and personal practices around food and physical activity, as well as the target child's food and physical activity practices. The checklist asks parents to report frequency (per day/week/month) of practices on 5-point Likert-type scales. The constructs measure parent diet quality and physical activity, child diet quality and physical activity, and parenting practices. Each question on the instrument is converted to a numeric value, 1 for the least desirable to 5 for most desirable response. The values for the entire instrument are summed (range 1 - 80 - only those checklists with at least one response are included) and divided by the number of items with a response (0 - 16), resulting in a mean score range of 0 - 5. The questions within each sub-scale are handled in the same way, with a sub-scale range of 0 - 5.
Secondary Outcomes
- Parental self-efficacy(up to 8 months)
- Food frequency of sugar sweetened beverages and foods(up to 8 months)
- Parent food choice behaviors(up to 8 months)