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CHOICES: Family Physicians Treat Overweight Children

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Obesity
Overweight
Interventions
Behavioral: Choices
Registration Number
NCT01674920
Lead Sponsor
University of Arizona
Brief Summary

CHOICES is a program to provide children and families with lifetime tools and lifestyle strategies to achieve and maintain a healthy body size. Both parents and children get active, learn about the food choices they can make, and about the roles of TV in their lives. Led by physicians and young adults, the 12 weekly 90 minute sessions provide hands on experiences that connect into the participants' daily lives. In the study, the families were divided into two groups, beginning their classes 6 months apart. Body measurements were taken at baseline and every 4 months to 16 months.

Detailed Description

The specific aim of this pilot study was to use the group office visit model to provide an obesity treatment intervention for children 8-11 years of age in gender-specific groups and their parents in a clinic setting. The targeted lifestyle components of the intervention are less TV viewing, less sweetened beverages, smaller food portions, less fast food/better choices away from home and more general physical activity. The psychosocial component was based in Resiliency; the Choices model focused on a non-judgmental approach to empowerment in relation to personal goals and knowledge of the basics of nutrition and physical activity.

Our aim was to recruit 35-40 children (approximately equal boys and girls) ages 8-11 and their parents for a 12 weekly sessions group office visit program. Participants were randomized into 2 groups; one group starting in March 2006 and the lagged intervention control group starting in September 2006. Physical measurements and data collection were at baseline, 4, 8, 12, 16 months from randomization.

We evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of the group office visit model and effect size (body mass index (BMI) and weight-for-age Z-scores). Feasibility and acceptability included ability to recruit within clinics, attendance, completion, follow-up rates, focus groups data and interviews of those who drop out. Evaluation of effect size included the patterns of growth over 15 months from baseline in relation to expected growth patterns and intervention exposure.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
35
Inclusion Criteria
  • Children in the 3rd to 5th grades and above the 85th percentile of BMI for age.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Conditions that would preclude dietary change or physical activity.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ChoicesChoicesThe 3-month twelve-session intervention, "Choices", included topics on nutrition, physical activity, and resiliency. Parents, boys and girls met separately. The sessions were developed for delivery by a family physician, two family medicine residents, and a nutritionist, who received training in positive psychology and resilience skills. All children were measured on the same dates, but children were randomly assigned to two cohorts, beginning 6 months apart, to facilitate statistical analysis by having one group experience "normal growth" on study prior to intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
body mass index age-and-gender specific Z-score9 months post intervention baseline

body mass index is weight over height squared; z-score described the position of that BMI in relation to the reference population in terms of standard deviation units. It is used to control for growth effects in children.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
weight for age-and-gender specific Z-score9 months post-intervention baseline

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Arizona

🇺🇸

Tucson, Arizona, United States

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