| Literature DB >> 26231850 |
Anna Ek1, Kathryn Lewis Chamberlain2, Jan Ejderhamn3, Philip A Fisher4,5, Claude Marcus6, Patricia Chamberlain7, Paulina Nowicka8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While obesity has been shown to be difficult to treat in school aged children and in adolescence, promising results have been detected for children who started treatment in early childhood. Yet knowledge on the effectiveness of structured early childhood obesity treatment programs is limited, preventing the widespread implementation of such programs. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of early treatment of childhood obesity with respect to treatment focus (parenting practices or lifestyle), length and intensity. The study will also examine the influence of gender, age, parental weight status, parenting practices, child behavior as well as parents' socioeconomic status and child and parental psychosocial health on children's weight status. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26231850 PMCID: PMC4522072 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1912-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Conceptual model of the relationships between parenting and child weight status
Fig. 2Study design
Content description of the parent group program
| Session | |
|---|---|
| 1. | Welcome and Introduction: Parents’ Key Roles |
| 2. | Food and Play: When More, When Less? |
| 3. | Cooperation |
| 4. | Parents as Teachers |
| 5. | Charts and Incentives |
| 6. | Pre-teaching and Planning |
| 7. | Limit Setting Strategies |
| 8. | Power Struggles |
| 9. | More Support – Less Stress |
| 10. | Summary: Parenting and Balancing Food and Play |
Socio-demographic characteristics and outcome measures collected at different time points
| Measure | Baseline | 3 months | 6 months | 12 months | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Weight/height | Measured by health professionals | x | x | x | x | |
| Waist circumference | x | x | x | x | ||
| Blood pressure | x | x | x | x | ||
| Blood samples (glucose, HbA1c, insulin, CRP, kolesterol, LDL kolesterol, HDL kolesterol, triglyceriders, liver status, urate, TSH) | x | x | ||||
| Date of birth | Child background questionnaire | x | ||||
| Country of birth | x | |||||
| Sex | x | |||||
| Health status | x | x | ||||
| Day care | x | x | ||||
| Visits to health care regarding child weight | x | x | ||||
| Sedentary behavior | x | x | x | x | ||
| Food habits | Food frequency questionnaire | x | x | x | x | |
| Eating behavior | Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire | x | x | x | x | |
| Behavior | Child Behavior Checklist | x | x | |||
|
| ||||||
| Weight/height | Parent background questionnaire | x | x | |||
| Date of birth | x | |||||
| Country of birth | x | |||||
| Sex | x | |||||
| Education level | x | |||||
| Health status/weight reducing operation | x | x | ||||
| Occupation status | x | x | ||||
| Income | x | x | ||||
| Family structure | x | x | ||||
| Social and economic support from network | x | x | ||||
| Perceived level of comfortable life | x | x | ||||
| Perceived child problem behavior and parental confidence | Lifestyle Behavior Checklist | x | x | x | x | |
| Feeding practices | Child Feeding Questionnaire | x | x | x | x | |
| Limit setting strategies | Communicating with children | x | x | x | x | |
| Family function | Family Assessment Device | x | x |
Measures used in the study
| Name of Instrument | Reference | Domains measured | Number of items | Brief description of measures: |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire (CEBQ) | Wardle et. al. 2001 | 35 | ||
|
| ||||
| Food Responsiveness (FR) | 5 | The child’s general appetite. | ||
| Enjoyment of Food (EF) | 4 | The child’s interest in food. | ||
| Emotional Overeating (EOE) | 4 | If the child eats as a response to emotions. | ||
| Desire to Drink (DD) | 3 | The child’s desire to drink | ||
|
| ||||
| Satiety Responsiveness (SR) | 5 | If the child gets full easily or not. | ||
| Slowness in Eating (SE) | 4 | The child's speed of eating. | ||
| Emotional Undereating (EUE) | 4 | If the child eats less as a response to emotions. | ||
| Fussiness (FU) | 6 | The child eats a limited variety of food. | ||
| Lifestyle Behavior Checklist (LBC) | West and Sanders 2009 West et. al. 2010 | Problem Scale/Confidence Scale | 25 | Parent’s perceptions of child obesity related problem behavior. Parent’s confidence in handling problematic behaviors. |
| Overeating (OE) | 7 | If the child eats large potions or often asks for food. | ||
| Misbehavior in relation to food (MB) | 7 | If the child throws tantrums about food or gets angry if not given food. | ||
| Emotional correlates of being overweight (EMO) | 5 | If the child complains about e.g. peer problems, clothes being too small. | ||
| Physical Activity (PA) | 5 | If the child is reluctant to physical activity and engages in sedentary behaviors. | ||
| Child Feeding Questionnaire (CFQ) | Birch et. al 2001 | |||
| Perceived Responsibility (PR) | 3 | Parental perception of their responsibility for child feeding. | ||
| Parent Perceived Weight (PPW) | 4 | Parental perception of their own weight status history. | ||
| Perceived Child Weight (PCW) | 6 | Parental perception of child weight status history. | ||
| Concern about child weight (CN) | 3 | Parental concern about the child’s risk of overweight. | ||
| Monitoring (MN) | 3 | The extent to which parent’s oversee the child’s food intake. | ||
| Restriction (RST) | 8 | The extent to which parents restrict the child’s access to food. | ||
| Pressure to Eat (PE) | 4 | Parent’s tendency to pressure the child to eat more food. | ||
| Family Assessment Device (FAD) | Epstein et. al. 1983 | |||
| Problem Solving | 5 | Ability to resolve problems in the family. | ||
| Communication | 6 | Exchange of clear and direct verbal information. | ||
| Roles | 8 | Division of responsibility for completing family tasks. | ||
| Affective Responsiveness | 6 | Ability to respond with appropriate emotion | ||
| Affective Involvement | 7 | Degree to which family members are involved and interested in one another. | ||
| Behavior Control | 9 | Manner used to express and maintain standards of behavior. | ||
| General Functioning | 12 | Overall function in the family. | ||
| Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) | Achenbach and Rescorla 2000 | 99 | ||
|
| ||||
| Emotionally Reactive | 9 | The child is easily disturbed, has mood swings etc. | ||
| Anxious/Depressed | 8 | The child is overly sensitive, clings to parent or too independent, sad etc. | ||
| Somatic Complaints | 11 | The child has aches, pain or vomits with no medical reason etc. | ||
| Withdrawn | 8 | The child shows little interest in people or surroundings, doesn’t answer etc. | ||
| Sleep Problems (not included in the Internalizing Scale) | 7 | The child doesn’t want to sleep alone, has nightmares, has little sleep etc. | ||
|
| ||||
| Attention Problems | 5 | The child can’t concentrate or sit still, wanders away et. | ||
| Aggressive behavior | 19 | The child is angry, defiant, disobedient, demanding, stubborn etc. | ||
| Beck’s Depression Inventory II (BDI-II) | Beck et. al 1988 | Mood, Pessimism, Sense of Failure, Lack of Satisfaction, Guilt Feelings, Sense of Punishment, Self-dislike, Self-accusation, Suicidal Wishes, Crying, Irritability, Social Withdrawal, Indecisiveness, Distortion of Body Image, Work Inhibition, Sleep Disturbance, Fatigability, Loss of Appetite, Weight Loss, Somatic Preoccupation and Loss of Libido. | 21 | Symptoms and attitudes to assess intensity of depression. |
| Communicating with Children | (self-developed) | 12 | ||
| Limit Setting Strategies | Parents limit setting strategies (consequent or not) | |||
| Emotional Regulation | Parents ability of emotional control |
Fig. 3Latent Growth Modeling of children’s BMI SDS
Fig. 4Structural Equation Modeling testing mediating effects of parenting and home environment on BMI SDS
Fig. 5A model testing moderating effects of parental depression