| Literature DB >> 21639940 |
Dianne S Ward1, Amber E Vaughn, Kant I Bangdiwala, Marci Campbell, Deborah J Jones, Abigail T Panter, June Stevens.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: More than 20% of US children ages 2-5 yrs are classified as overweight or obese. Parents greatly influence the behaviors their children adopt, including those which impact weight (e.g., diet and physical activity). Unfortunately, parents often fail to recognize the risk for excess weight gain in young children, and may not be motivated to modify behavior. Research is needed to explore intervention strategies that engage families with young children and motivate parents to adopt behaviors that will foster healthy weight development.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21639940 PMCID: PMC3123597 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-431
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Conceptual model. The conceptual model for the Parenting SOS program is based on Darling and Steinberg's Integrative Model of Parenting Ryan and Deci's Self-Determination Theory, and incorporates parent goals and values, parenting style and stress, and parenting practices, which could influence child diet and activity behaviors as well as child weight.
Figure 2Intervention model. Participants are recruited into the study and complete a baseline assessment before randomization. After either the 8-month My Parenting SOS intervention or child book club, participants complete a post-intervention assessment. The maintenance assessment are completed after a 6-month no-treatment period.
Formative and pilot work
| Date | Activity | Objectives |
|---|---|---|
| June 2004 - Jan 2005 | Focus groups with mothers of overweight children | Identify culturally specific child management concerns and behavioral intervention needs of parents and/or caregivers, and their preferences for intervention channels and modalities [ |
| Mar - May 2005 | Focus groups with AA mothers | Explore barriers to healthy nutrition and activity practices at home, collect impressions regarding a parenting for healthy weight intervention, and assess preferences regarding intervention delivery |
| Sept - Oct 2006 | Pilot of 4-part workshop series with parents from 1 local child care center | Examine the acceptability of a parenting for healthy weight workshop series and evaluate appropriateness of potential measures |
| Oct - Dec 2006 | Pilot of 3-part workshop series with parents from 6 local child care centers | Examine the feasibility of workshop delivery by trained facilitator (with a social work background) provided at the child care center |
Intervention overview
| Sessions | Key parenting messages | Nutrition/PA messages/activities |
|---|---|---|
| Stress management | • Identification of common parenting stressors | • Examples of ineffective coping strategy = using food/alcohol as source of comfort |
| Parenting style | • Introduction of 4 major parenting styles (authoritarian, authoritative, indulgent, uninvolved) | • Discuss strategies that parents with different styles might use to get their child to eat fruits and vegetables, and the pros and cons of each |
| Child management (2 sessions) | • Strategies for managing child behavior (attending, reinforcement and rewarding, effortful ignoring, setting clear rules and limits, choices, consequences, time out) | • Use of attending and verbal reward to encourage intake of healthy foods |
| Emotion regulation | • Improve understanding of how parents contribute to their child's emotional development through role modeling, their own response to their emotions, and their parenting behaviors | • Re-emphasize examples of ineffective and effective coping strategies and that children will learn these from their parents' example |
| Coparenting | • Strategies for strengthening the communication between coparents so that they can present a united front | • Encouraging parents to present a united front when it comes to healthy habits |
| Family routines | • Introduction to creating routines that can improve efficiency and predictability at home | • Planning time for healthy meals should be part of morning and evening routines |
| Nutrition and feeding practices | • Routines can help parents find the time to plan, prepare, and eat meals as a family | • Introduction to the food guide pyramid |
| Physical activity and activity practices | • Planning ahead can help parents make the time for family activity | • Introduction to physical activity guidelines for adults and children |
| Sleep habits | • Creating bedtime routines can help parents get children to bed with fewer battles | • Sleep recommendations for children and adults |