| Literature DB >> 22455381 |
Melissa Wake1, Kate Lycett, Matthew A Sabin, Jane Gunn, Kay Gibbons, Cathy Hutton, Zoe McCallum, Elissa York, Michael Stringer, Gary Wittert.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite record rates of childhood obesity, effective evidence-based treatments remain elusive. While prolonged tertiary specialist clinical input has some individual impact, these services are only available to very few children. Effective treatments that are easily accessible for all overweight and obese children in the community are urgently required. General practitioners are logical care providers for obese children but high-quality trials indicate that, even with substantial training and support, general practitioner care alone will not suffice to improve body mass index (BMI) trajectories. HopSCOTCH (the Shared Care Obesity Trial in Children) will determine whether a shared-care model, in which paediatric obesity specialists co-manage obesity with general practitioners, can improve adiposity in obese children.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22455381 PMCID: PMC3464143 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2431-12-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pediatr ISSN: 1471-2431 Impact factor: 2.125
Figure 1Graphical depiction of components of the HopSCOTCH trial.
Primary and secondary outcome measures for the HopSCOTCH trial
| Construct | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body Mass Index (kg/m2) | Portable rigid stadiometer | Height is measured twice and the average used; if the values differ by >0.5 cm a third measurement is taken and the average of the two closest values used. | ||
| Waist circumference | | Lufkin Executive Steel Tape (W606PM); measured | Average of two waist measurements; if they differ by ≥1 cm, a third measurement is taken and the mean of the two closest used. | |
| Body fat (%) | | Tanita Digital Body Composition Monitor (BC-351)[ | Average of two body percentage fat measurements. | |
| Blood pressure/ heart rate | | Welch Allyn ProBP3400; measured | Three blood pressure/heart rate readings are taken at least two minutes apart on the right arm with the child sitting; the average of the two closest readings is used. | |
| Nutrition | | 4 day food diary; parent report | Parents report child’s consumption of each of 17 food and drink items (0, 1, 2, >2 times) for two weekdays and two weekend days. | |
| Physical activity | | Actical Accelerometer (Mini Mitter); measured | Worn for 7 full days; ≥5 valid days required. Valid days have ≥10 hours of non-missing data between 6 am-11 pm. Missing data are segments with ≥20 minutes of consecutive “0” counts, or counts >0 that are constant for ≥10 minutes. Outcomes across all valid days: mean activity counts/min, and % time spent in moderate to vigorous physical activity. | |
| Health status | Paediatric quality of life inventory (PedsQL 4.0); self report and parent-proxy versions [ | Parent-completed 23-item scale that yields total, physical summary, and psychosocial summary scores, each with a possible range of 0–100 (100 = best possible health); quantitative variable. | ||
| Body dissatisfaction | | Body figure perception questionnaire; self report | Child picture scale of 1–7 (1 = underweight, 7 = obese) from which child picks perceived and ideal selves. “Perceived” minus “Ideal” self yields a discrepancy index, with positive and negatives scores representing desires to be thinner and fatter, respectively. | |
| Physical appearance and self worth | | Modified from Harter’s | Six pairs of statements with binary response format; children choose the statement from each pair that is closest to their competence. Each of the 6 responses is then coded as being either “positive/better perception” or “negative/worse perception”. The 6 responses are analysed as a single outcome. | |
| Behaviour | | Strengths and difficulties questionnaire [ | Parent-completed 25-item scale that yields scores for conduct problems, emotional symptoms, hyperactivity, peer relationships and pro-social behaviour. | |
| Parent Readiness to change | Parent’s readiness to change child’s weight[ | 3 items, each with a possible 5 responses (strongly agree – strongly disagree). | ||
| Parent BMI | Weight (kg)/(height (m)2); measured and self report | Baseline values reported for self and partner by responding parent. Values at 12 months measured for the parent(s) present with the child and reported; measured data used preferentially. | ||