'Food, Fun, Fresh, Family' Program for Healthy Eating and Growth for Elementary-age Children.
- Conditions
- Diet, Healthy Growth
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Family supportBehavioral: BGCAA's after-school program with CATCH curriculum
- Registration Number
- NCT06010784
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Texas at Austin
- Brief Summary
The goal of this community-based randomized trial in elementary-aged children and a caregiver (parent/guardian) is to test the effect of providing families with produce and grocery store gift cards (family support) in conjunction with an after-school program for physical activity and healthy eating on improving children's overall diet, in comparison to the child only attending the after-school program without the family support.
Participating families will:
* receive weekly produce bags delivered to their home, recipes, and gift cards to a local grocery store (family support)
* the child will attend the after-school program during the school year
Researchers will compare the child's diet and eating scores with those in the after-school program alone.
- Detailed Description
Children in grades 1 to 5 and enrolled in after-school program offered by the Boys \& Girls Clubs of Austin Area (BGCAA) in selected schools, together with their caregiver (a parent/guardian), will be randomized into one of the two arms:
* Intervention group will receive, for 4 wks, 10 lbs of produce delivered weekly at home and one USD 20 gift card sent bi-weekly (total USD 40). Then, for 15 wks, the caregiver will receive every other week an electronic interactive health goals reminder survey to complete, for which they receive USD10 if completed. The goal sheets are optional activities.
* Control group will receive $120 as grocery store e-gift cards at the end of the study.
Regardless of the allocation arm, the child will attend the BGCAA's afterschool program as part of their family's association with the organization. The program runs daily, and the children are encouraged to attend at least 2x/wk. The "Coordinated Approach to Child Health" (CATCH) program will be delivered as part of the BGCAA program 2x/week.
Primary question: Does a 19-week after-school evidence-based program on nutrition education and physical activity for elementary-aged children improve overall child diet better when resources to encourage healthy eating are also provided to caregivers than when such resources are not provided?
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 119
- Index guardian must be at least 18 years old
- Child must be enrolled in grade 1 to 5 (aged approx. 6-11 y-o) for the 2023-2024 school year
- Child must be enrolled in the BGCAA after-school program at the beginning of the 2023-24 fall semester at one of the 11 sites where BGCAA offers after-school program to elementary school-aged children
- Index parent must be able to speak English and/or Spanish
- Already having a sibling enrolled in the study
- Child having serious food allergies or dietary restrictions associated with produce products
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention: After-school program + family support BGCAA's after-school program with CATCH curriculum - Intervention: After-school program + family support Family support - Control: After-school program only BGCAA's after-school program with CATCH curriculum -
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Child's fruit and vegetable intake as measured by the Texas School Physical Activity and Nutrition (TX SPAN) 2019-2020 dietary assessment questions Baseline, mid-point (4 weeks), end-point (19 weeks) This study will use the section of the TX SPAN data collection instrument related to food choices via structured interview (English or Spanish). 32 questions reference specific marker foods or food groups asking the number of times each food group was consumed on the previous day (analogous to a 24h recall), with responses 0 times, 1 time, 2 times or 3 or more times. Total FV variety will be measured by summing the items that ask about fruit and vegetable varieties (excluding juice).
More on the TX SPAN can be found at \<go.uth.edu/SPAN\>.Child's overall diet quality as assessed by SPAN Healthy Eating Index (SHEI) Baseline, mid-point (4 weeks), end-point (19 weeks) As described in 2015 Ranjit et al. SPAN Healthy Eating Index (SHEI) is a composite measure comprising both healthy and unhealthy items from diet measures available in the TX SPAN.
Healthy score is the sum of previous day consumption of baked or grilled (not fried) meats, milk, yogurt, brown rice, brown pasta, a variety of vegetable types, fruits (not fruit juice), and beans.
Unhealthy score is the sum of consumption of fried meat, red meat, sugar-sweetened beverages, salty fried snacks, and a variety of dessert items. These are reverse coded, so that the lowest frequency represented the healthiest eating practice.
These two sums are combined into the single composite SHEI and rescaled from 0-100, where higher scores mean healthier eating practices.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Guardian's fruits and vegetables intake as measured by the NHANES 2009-2010 Dietary Screening Questionnaire (DSQ) Baseline, mid-point (4 weeks), end-point (19 weeks) The DSQ FV module has 10 items that capture frequency of consumption of fruits and vegetables and their sources (such as vegetables in recipes) in the past 30 days. It does not require participants to report serving size. Responses are converted to daily cup equivalent estimates.
BMI-for-age percentile Baseline, end-point (19 weeks) Twice during the program, all children in the after-school program will participate in an interactive activity during a field day where BGCAA staff (blinded to the study arm allocation) measures the children's weight, height and how high they can jump. Because body weight may be a sensitive issue to some children and/or their families, it was proposed to embed it in the daily after-school activities, minimizing the focus on direct and open measurement of weight.
First, height will be measured using a stadiometer against the wall before the activity. Then, the child will stand on a mat with an integrated scale that will measure their weight. Finally, the children will write their name on an athletic tape and/or post-it notes and jump to stick it to a wall.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Boys & Girls Clubs of Austin
🇺🇸Austin, Texas, United States