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Improving Childhood Obesity-Related Behavior Change Through Better Risk Communication

Not Applicable
Conditions
Obesity, Childhood
Interventions
Behavioral: Novel risk communication
Registration Number
NCT03074929
Lead Sponsor
Seattle Children's Hospital
Brief Summary

One-third of American children are overweight or obese, leading to an increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD), early mortality, and other risks throughout their lifespan relative to normal weight children. In our pilot work, we found that 67-83% of parents underestimate a child's long-term risk of developing cardiovascular disease in adulthood and that parents thought their own child's risks were 13-15% lower than those of a typical child in their community, even controlling for family health and demographic characteristics. Parents were 40 times less likely to predict that their child, rather than a typical child in their community, would be overweight or obese in adulthood. These findings suggest that parents suffer from optimism bias, the tendency to overestimate one's chances of experiencing unlikely positive events. Belief that a child is at increased risk for adverse health outcomes in adulthood could be an important motivator for a family to initiate behavior changes and vice versa.

The overall goal of this research is to develop provider-based risk communication approaches to motivate parents of obese children to engage in behavior change to protect their children from CVD and other obesity-related co-morbidities later in life. Specifically, the investigators will:

1. Develop risk communication methods that providers can use to better convey accurate information about a child's health behaviors, obesity status, and future health risks to parents.

2. Using an online experiment, we will evaluate the impact of new risk communication methods on parental engagement in behavior change.

3. Pilot test the feasibility, acceptability, and impact of new risk communication approaches in pediatric primary care clinics.

This work will give pediatricians novel tools to effectively discuss the long-term consequences of childhood obesity with parents. The findings from this work will inform an interventional trial that will assess the impact of improved risk communication techniques on child behavior change and health outcomes.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
50
Inclusion Criteria
  • must be a parent of a 5-12 year old child
  • child must be a patient at University of Washington Medical Center
  • child must have BMI at or above 95th percentile for age and sex
  • parent must have home or mobile internet access
Exclusion Criteria
  • None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Novel risk communicationNovel risk communicationIntervention parents will receive a novel risk communication message via a tablet app. Parents will also receive height, weight, and BMI percentile information typically provided by a provider during well-child visits as usual.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Frequency of logging meals in food diary7 days

Frequency of diet monitoring

Quality of food diary7 days

Quality of diet monitoring (i.e. recording 5 or more different foods per day)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Weight class perception (questionnaire)7 days

Does parent perceive child to be Underweight/About the right weight/Overweight/Obese

Anxiety (Perceived Stress Scale)7 days

Perceived Stress Scale

Concern about child health (CAHPS)7 days

In the last 6 months, did you have any questions or concerns about your child's health or health care?

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