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Strong Futures: A Trial of Two Primary Care Based Interventions to Promote Optimal Health in Latino Infants and Toddlers

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Health-Related Quality of Life
Childhood Obesity
Interventions
Behavioral: Infant obesity prevention
Behavioral: Financial coaching
Registration Number
NCT03438721
Lead Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco
Brief Summary

Latino children experience higher rates of obesity compared to non-Hispanic white children, especially in low-income communities. Optimal feeding strategies in early life, avoidance of screen time and longer sleep duration may lower the risk of obesity. Family financial hardship is also associated with short- and long-term health risks, including behavioral and mental health problems, and toxic stress which contributes to elevated risk of common chronic conditions over the life course. This proposal aims to pilot test two interventions to promote optimal health outcomes in Latino infants. Study participants will meet with a health educator after well child visits at 2-weeks, 2-, 4-, 6-, 9- and 12-months. Half of the parents will receive education on obesity prevention. The other half will receive financial education and case management using an established financial coaching approach. Parents will also receive text messages that reinforce educational content. The objective of this study is to determine the acceptability and feasibility of offering these interventions in the well-child setting. Study investigators also seek to determine the preliminary efficacy of these interventions on infant and parent health outcomes including dietary intake, screen time, sleep duration, health related quality of life and financial stress.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
194
Inclusion Criteria
  • Study investigators will recruit parents who self-identify as Latino and their newborn infants
  • Infants must be born at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital (ZSFG)
  • Infants must be singletons
  • Parents must intend to receive primary care for their infant at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital
  • Parents must speak Spanish (but may also speak English)
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Infants with birth weights less than 2500 grams
  • Infants born prior to 37 weeks and 0 days gestation
  • Infants with any medical condition that significantly affects feeding, such as infants who are unable to feed by mouth
  • Infants with any medical condition that is known to be associated with failure to thrive or specialized nutritional needs
  • Infants in foster care
  • Infants for whom the primary caregiver is not the infant's mother or father
Read More

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Infant Obesity PreventionInfant obesity preventionThe infant obesity prevention arm will provide parents with education on optimal infant feeding, sleep, and screen time practices.
Financial CoachingFinancial coachingThe financial coaching arm will provide parents with education on basic financial literacy topics and coaching to help parents achieve financial goals.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Child dietary intake15-months

Total child intake of sugar-sweetened-beverages and 100% fruit juice in ounces and total intake of fruits and vegetables in grams.

Parent health-related quality of lifeChild age 15-months

Assessed by the PROMIS-10. The Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System Global Short Form 10 (PROMIS-10) is a ten-item scale measuring health related quality of life with subscales for physical and mental health. Raw overall total PROMIS-10 scale scores range from 10-50, with sub-scale T-scores that range from 16-67 for physical health and 21-68 for mental health. For all PROMIS-10 total raw and sub-scale scores, higher scores indicate better health-related quality of life.

Child screen timeChild age 15-months

Total minutes of daily screen time

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Child sleepChild age 15-months

Child total minutes of sleep in 24-hour period

Child anthropometricsChild ages 6-months, 12-months, 15-months and 24-months

World Health Organization Weight-for-length z-score

Parent financial stressChild age 15-months

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Financial Well-Being Scale. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Financial Well Being Questionnaire (Short Form, CFPB Financial Well Being Questionnaire SF) is a five item scale measuring individual financial well-being. The CFPB Financial Well Being Questionnaire has a range of 0-20 raw score, based on a 5-point Likert scale for each item, with one item (item 4) reverse coded and summed with responses for the remaining items to arrive at the raw score. The raw score is converted to a reference financial well-being score.Higher scores indicate greater financial well-being.

Parental feeding styles15-months

Study investigators will assess responsive, pressuring and indulgent feeding styles using the "responsive satiety," "pressuring finishing," "pressuring soothing," and "indulgence permissive" sub-scales of the Infant Feeding Styles Questionnaire. These sub-scales assess both behaviors and beliefs relevant to the construct. Scores range from 1-5 with higher scores indicating greater use of that feeding style.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Children's Health Center at San Francisco General Hospital

🇺🇸

San Francisco, California, United States

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