Skill-based Cooking Intervention to Reduce Eating Out
- Conditions
- Obesity
- Interventions
- Other: Cooking
- Registration Number
- NCT02202733
- Lead Sponsor
- Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
- Brief Summary
The primary goal of the study is to use an iterative process to develop and refine a skill-based cooking intervention to decrease the consumption of energy from foods prepared away from home for evening meals, decrease energy intake, and promote a healthy weight in parents and children aged 3-10 years.
- Detailed Description
Phase I. Conduct 2-4 focus groups with 6-10 caretaker, who report eating foods prepared away from home ≥3 times per week, per group to gain insight into current eating behaviors of foods prepared away from home, current perceptions about a home prepared evening meal, and barriers to preparing evening meals at home. Information gathered during Phase I will be used to inform intervention development in Phase II.
Phase II. Develop, refine, and manualize a skill-based cooking intervention for overweight/obese caretakers of a child aged 3-10 years. The aim of Phase II is to test the feasibility of a skill-based cooking intervention to reduce the consumption of foods prepared away from home for the evening meal (e.g., pre-prepared frozen foods, restaurant foods, fast food, take-out), energy intake from evening meals, and promote a healthy weight in parents and children. Information collected during Phase I will inform the development of the skill-based cooking intervention. Once developed, the intervention will be refined with 6 primary caretakers of a child, who meet criteria for being overweight/obese during a testing phase. Conducting the intervention with at least six families will provide the opportunity for further refinement of intervention procedures. The results will be important to demonstrate feasibility for a future pilot randomized controlled trial that will test the impact of a skill-based cooking intervention compared to a standard cooking demonstration where recipes are simply provided to families.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 33
Not provided
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Cooking Cooking A skill-based cooking intervention for caretakers of an overweight/obese child aged 3-10 years.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Dietary Intake (Phase II only) 0 and 10 weeks Caregivers will be asked to complete a 7-day dietary record of what they and their child eat at the evening meal. For each evening meal, the caretaker will be asked to describe the meal type (fast food, restaurant, pre-prepared frozen meal, or home prepared); the specific foods and drinks consumed, and the amount consumed by the child. Data from dietary records will be input into Nutrition Data System for Research (NDSR) software and analyzed for energy intake, percent energy from fat, and food groups (fruits, vegetables, grains, proteins, dairy) from the evening meal. Foods prepared away from home will be classified based on caretaker indication of fast food, restaurant, pre-prepared frozen meal, or home prepared on the dietary record.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Anthropometrics 0 adn 10 weeks Height and weight will be measured using standard procedures.
Caretaker Attitudes and Confidence 0 and 10 weeks Caretakers will report ease of providing foods prepared away from home (i.e., pre-prepared frozen meals, restaurant food, fast food, take-out) for an evening meal, ease of providing a home prepared evening meal, and their confidence with meal preparation using a 100-mm visual analog scale (VAS). Further caretakers will rate their ability, enjoyment of cooking and desire to cook on a 100-mm VAS.
Food Costs 0 and 10 weeks Caretakers will be provided with four visual images with each image showing one adult evening meal and two child evening meals. Caretaker will record the total cost of the meals shown in each image.
Portions 0 and 10 weeks Caretakers will be provided with visual images of foods in different portion amounts and asked to identify which image best represents the amount their child would be served for dinner. Caretakers will also identify the images that best represent the amount they would serve themselves for dinner.
Dinner Choices 0 and 10 weeks Caretakers will complete a 10-question, open-ended questionnaire that solicits information related to choices of foods prepared away from home and foods prepared at home.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
🇺🇸Cincinnati, Ohio, United States