Healthy Children 2021 Study in Childcare Centers
- Conditions
- Executive FunctionDietary HabitsChild HealthSleepChildFamily HealthPediatric Obesity
- Interventions
- Behavioral: The education and training of early childhood educators and their intervention on children
- Registration Number
- NCT04082247
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Minho
- Brief Summary
In Portugal, 17.3% of children under 10 years old are overweight and 7.7% are obese. Research has shown the implementation of healthy lifestyle promotion programs and obesity prevention, however "best practices" are far from being defined. Also, the first five years of life are important for the executive functions development, namely memory, inhibition (including self-regulation) and flexibility, which includes creative thinking, thinking "outside of the box", important in problem solving. The importance of social and emotional dimensions, as well as physical health for the development of cognitive health is consensual, as sleep deprivation, low physical activity, unhealthy food may inhibit the proper development of executive functions.
This project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a healthy lifestyle promotion program on emotional, social and cognitive development and eating habits, sleep and physical activity in children between 12 and 42 months of age.
A cluster randomised trial will be developed and 300 children, from 16 childcare centres will be invited to participate. Half of the childcare centres will be allocated to the control group and the other half to the intervention group. Data collection will occur before randomisation (at baseline) and after intervention. A feasibility study will be undertaken prior to the experimental study, in accordance with internationally accepted procedures.
The investigators intend to implement the concept that the development of executive functions requires the combination of healthy eating, physical activity and sleep.
The project will contribute with evidence-based to the cognitive, social and emotional development in children.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 300
- Apparently healthy (with no pre-existing conditions) children aged 12-42 months at baseline.
- Children with disability
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Experimental group The education and training of early childhood educators and their intervention on children The education and training of early childhood educators (developed by the researchers) and their intervention on children.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in dietary intake 12 months - 42 months The child's eating habits will be collected using the one-day food record, completed by parents or early childhood educators.
Change in 24-h movement 12 months - 42 months Physical activity, sleep and sedentary behavior will be assessed using the Actigraph accelerometer, which will be used for 5 consecutive days (3 days a week and 2 days a weekend).
Change in cognitive, social and emotional development 12 months - 42 months The Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development - III edition identifies the child's developmental competencies across five major developmental domains; identifies deficits in very young children; and determines the need for further in-depth assessment. Raw scores from the cognitive and social-emotional scale, which does not contain separate subtests, can be converted to a scaled score (M=10, SD=3), which can then additionally be converted to a composite score equivalent (M=100, SD=15). Raw scores for cognitive and motor subtests translate to scaled scores based on 10-day increments up to age 5 months 16 days, at which point norms are based on 1-month intervals (e.g., 5 months 16 days to 6 months 15 days, 35 months 16 days to 36 months 15 days). The normative sample for the social-emotional domain is divided into nine age categories (by months: 0-3, 4-5, 6-9, 10-14, 15-18, 19-24, 25-30, and 31-40). Higher values represent a better performance.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in blood pressure (systolic and diastolic) 12 months - 42 months Digitally assessed, using standardized procedures.
Change in weight 12 months - 42 months Weight (kg) will be assessed with no clothes and no shoes, using standardised procedures.
Sociodemographic profile 12 months - 42 months Families' profile will be assessed using the Graffar scale, adapted to Portugal. This is an international social classification, used as an indicator of the various welfare levels of a social group. It includes 5 criteria: occupation, level of education, sources of family income, housing comfort and appearance of the neighbourhood. The sum of the points obtained in the classification provides a final score that corresponds to social class, according to the following classification: Class I (5-9 points), Class II (10-13 points), Class III (14-17 points), Class IV (18-21 points) and Class V (22-25 points). The higher the score, the better the sociodemographic profile.
Family lifestyles 12 months - 42 months Families' lifestyles will be assessed through the International Physical Activity Questionnaire-short version, which looks at the types of intensity of physical activity and sitting time that people do as part of their daily lives. It's composed by 7 items, open-ended questions surrounding individuals' (parents) last 7-day recall of physical activity.
Change in length and waist circumference 12 months - 42 months Length and waist circumference (cm) will be assessed with no clothes nor shoes using standardised procedures.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Minho
🇵🇹Braga, Portugal