Nurturing Needs Study: Parenting Food Motivated Children
- Conditions
- ParentingEating BehaviorPediatric ObesityDiet, Healthy
- Interventions
- Other: Measurement
- Registration Number
- NCT06111040
- Lead Sponsor
- Temple University
- Brief Summary
High food motivation among children is trait-like and increases risks of unhealthy dietary intake and obesity. Scientific knowledge of how parenting can best support healthy eating habits and growth among children who are predisposed to overeating is surprisingly limited. This investigation will identify supportive food parenting approaches for obesity prevention that address the needs of highly food motivated children.
- Detailed Description
High levels of food motivation among young children are heritable, track over time, and associated with elevated risks of unhealthy eating and obesity. Despite significant growth of family-based obesity prevention efforts, the evidence base is remarkably scant on parenting highly food motivated children to prevent obesity and poor dietary outcomes. The goal of this investigation is to generate a robust basic science evidence for parenting highly food motivated children to prevent excessive dietary intakes and body mass index (BMI) gains during the preschool years. Using a prospective cohort design, this investigation follow 300 caregiver/child dyads over 18 months as children transition from preschool to elementary school, when significant numbers of children begin to experience problems of poor diet quality and obesity. Children with varying food motivation will be recruited to understand whether highly food motivated children have different needs than other children. A multi-method approach will use state-of-the-art measures, including ecological momentary assessment, to comprehensively investigate the amount, types, and consistency of food parenting practices (i.e., specific, goal-oriented behaviors) needed to prevent food motivated behaviors, excessive dietary intake, and BMI gains in children. Specifically, the role of structure (i.e., theoretically supportive) and its differentiation from more coercive types of food parenting control will be comprehensively characterized.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 600
- Child ages 4 or 5 years at baseline;
- Parent/ primary caregiver with legal representation (having 50% or more custody of child);
- Parent/primary caregiver reporting primary responsibility for child feeding outside of childcare (being with child when they are eating at least two times daily);
- Caregiver with a cell phone that can be used to send and receive text messages. If there is more than one age-eligible child in the family, we will ask the caregiver to pick the index child.
- Parent/primary caregiver <18 years of age;
- Child history of major food allergies (e.g., peanuts);
- Child medication use (e.g., insulin), developmental disability (e.g., autism) or medical condition(s) (e.g., diabetes) known to affect food intake and growth;
- Foster child.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Caregiver-child dyads Measurement A cohort of 375 caregivers and 375 children aged 4-5 years at baseline will be recruited and followed longitudinally for 18 months.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method BMI change Baseline, 18 months % of the 50th percentile per age- and sex-specific CDC reference values for BMI on a log scale
Excessive dietary intakes Baseline, 18 months Indicators: SFAS intakes and meal/snack sizes estimated from 24-hour dietary recalls
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Observed food motivated behaviors Baseline, 18 months Indicators: Eating in the absence of hunger and relative reinforcing value of food
Trial Locations
- Locations (2)
USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center
🇺🇸Houston, Texas, United States
Temple University - Center for Obesity Research and Education
🇺🇸Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States