| Literature DB >> 26679186 |
Melanie D Hingle1, Tami Turner2, Randa Kutob3, Nirav Merchant4, Denise J Roe5, Craig Stump6,7, Scott B Going8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is well established that behavioral lifestyle interventions resulting in modest weight reduction in adults can prevent or delay type 2 diabetes mellitus; however in children, successful weight management interventions are rarely found outside of controlled clinical settings. The lack of effective community-based programs is a barrier to reducing obesity prevalence and diabetes risk in children. The objective of our study is to develop and test a group-randomized family-centered community-based type 2 diabetes prevention intervention targeting at-risk children, 9- to 12-years-old. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26679186 PMCID: PMC4683710 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-2595-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1EPIC Kids Study design, recruitment, procedures
Program goals, target behaviors, and behavior change techniques
| Program goals | Target behaviors | Behavior change techniques |
|---|---|---|
| Make physical activity an integral and routine part of life | Encourage moderate-to-vigorous physical activity | Goal setting |
| Manage screen time | Self-monitoring | |
| Eat a healthy diet (both quality and quantity) | Promote nutrient dense foods with an emphasis on vegetables, legumes, and whole grains | Role modeling by others (especially parents and siblings) |
| Limit energy-dense foods (especially high sugar, high fat snacks) | Social support | |
| Limit sugar-sweetened beverages | Problem solving | |
| Encourage adequate sleep | Feedback | |
| Create food and activity environments to insure healthy options and behaviors are the routine, easy choice | Practice proactive food, physical activity, and media parenting | Positive self-talk |
| Structure the home environment to support healthy choices | Mindfulness | |
| Plan ahead for meals (home and restaurants) | ||
| Make time for family meals, activities, and media |
EPIC Kids intervention – weekly session format
| Activity | Description | Rationale for activity |
|---|---|---|
| Drop-in physical activity | A “join-as-you-arrive” physical activity provides a preview of the PA activity of the week | Get kids and families moving instead of sitting upon arrival |
| Reflection | Groups families together to discuss previous week’s goal-setting to share challenges and successes; self-monitoring is discussed and incentivized | Foster between-family interactions, source of new ideas and inspiration for others, ‘accountability’ |
| Food for thought | Live food demo and tasting opportunity focused on one of the three goal food groups: vegetables, legumes, whole grains | Prepare and taste healthy (and delicious) food |
| Family physical activity | These are fun physical activities the whole family can enjoy; minimal equipment required | Demonstrate activity can be fun, especially when the entire family gets involved |
| OR | ||
| Kid physical activity and parenting discussion | Active and kids choices, and FUN; parents focus on a parenting energy balance topic during this moderated discussion | Demonstrate activity can be fun; Parents learn proactive parenting around media, food, and physical activity |
| Energy balance activity | Hands-on activities that provide families with foundational knowledge and opportunities to practice healthy lifestyle behaviors | Provide opportunities to skill-build and practice as a family |
| Goal-setting | Integral to behavior change, families work together to set goals around energy balance behaviors | Promote behavior change |
Fig. 2EPIC Kids mobile screen shot – home page for week 3 activities
Fig. 3EPIC Kids mobile screen shot – goal-setting and self-monitoring tool
Process evaluation and monitoring plan
| Conceptual category | Data collection instrument | Variables | When |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reach | Screening form | • Inquiries | Screening |
| Baseline questionnaire | • Participant demographics | Enrollment | |
| Efficacy | Lifestyle coach training survey & focus group | • Prior experience as a Lifestyle/DPPa Coach | Pre-study training (1 time) |
| Telephone debriefing with lifestyle coaches | • Ease of implementation | After first lesson (1 time) | |
| Lifestyle coach weekly survey | • Curriculum comprehension | Weekly after each lesson (11 times) | |
| Attendance record | • Adherence (in-person) | Weekly (12 times) | |
| Participant weekly questionnaire (Child, parent) | • Comprehension | Weekly after each lesson (11 times) | |
| UA staff observation rubric | • Study fidelity (delivered as written and on time) | 4x each study site | |
| Lifestyle coaches final survey | • Perceived efficacy of intervention | End of program (1 time) | |
| Participant final survey (Child and parent) | • Perceived effectiveness of instructor | End of program (1 time) | |
| Study outcomes | • Anthropometric (BMI-percentile, waist circumference) | Pre-post study and follow-up 12 weeks later (3 times) | |
| N/A – program data | • Cost | Throughout intervention | |
| Potential adoption, maintenance and implementation by YMCAc | YMCA administrator interview | • Likelihood of adoption | Perceived efficacy of intervention |
aDPP = adult Diabetes Prevention Program
bData collected from parents only
cData from efficacy outcomes will be compiled post-study for a report to be presented to administrators prior to the interview