| Literature DB >> 27211525 |
Emily J Tomayko1, Ronald J Prince2, Kate A Cronin2, Alexandra K Adams2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: American Indian children of pre-school age have disproportionally high obesity rates and consequent risk for related diseases. Healthy Children, Strong Families was a family-based randomized trial assessing the efficacy of an obesity prevention toolkit delivered by a mentor v. mailed delivery that was designed and administered using community-based participatory research approaches.Entities:
Keywords: American Indian; Community-based participatory research; Early childhood; Family; Home-based intervention; Nutrition; Paediatric obesity; Physical activity
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27211525 PMCID: PMC5039403 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980016001014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Fig. 1Healthy Children, Strong Families study flow diagram. ‘Family’ indicates the adult–child dyad
Adult and child baseline demographic information; Healthy Children, Strong Families intervention among American Indian families with young children (2–5-year-olds), Wisconsin, USA
| Mailed group ( | Mentored group ( | Total ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean or |
| Mean or |
| Mean or |
| |
| Adult | ||||||
| Age (years), mean and | 31·8 | 8·9 | 32·9 | 8·0 | 32·3 | 8·5 |
| Gender, female | 81 | 97·6 | 64 | 95·5 | 145 | 96·7 |
| Ethnicity | ||||||
| American Indian | 76 | 91·6 | 64 | 95·5 | 140 | 93·3 |
| White | 6 | 7·2 | 3 | 4·5 | 9 | 6·0 |
| Unknown | 1 | 1·2 | 0 | 0·0 | 1 | 0·7 |
| Relationship | ||||||
| Mother | 70 | 84·3 | 58 | 86·6 | 128 | 85·3 |
| Father | 1 | 1·2 | 2 | 3·0 | 3 | 2·0 |
| Grandparent/other | 12 | 14·5 | 7 | 6·0 | 19 | 12·7 |
| Educational level | ||||||
| High school or less | 16 | 19·3 | 15 | 19·7 | 31 | 20·7 |
| Some college | 30 | 36·1 | 24 | 35·8 | 54 | 36·0 |
| Completed college and beyond | 22 | 26·5 | 16 | 23·9 | 38 | 25·3 |
| Unknown | 15 | 18·1 | 12 | 17·9 | 27 | 18·0 |
| BMI (kg/m2), mean and | 32 | 9·1 | 33 | 7·8 | 32 | 8·5 |
| Current smoker (yes) | 48 | 57·8 | 34 | 50·7 | 82 | 54·7 |
| Child | ||||||
| Age (years), mean and | 4·0 | 0·9 | 4·0 | 0·9 | 4·0 | 0·9 |
| Gender, female | 36 | 43·4 | 34 | 50·7 | 70 | 46·7 |
| Ethnicity | ||||||
| American Indian | 77 | 92·8 | 61 | 91·0 | 138 | 92·0 |
| White | 2 | 2·4 | 2 | 3·0 | 4 | 2·7 |
| Other | 3 | 3·6 | 2 | 3·0 | 5 | 2·3 |
| Unknown | 1 | 1·2 | 2 | 3·0 | 3 | 2·0 |
| WIC participation, yes | 63 | 75·9 | 47 | 70·1 | 110 | 73·3 |
WIC, Special Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program for Women, Infants, and Children.
Adult and child outcomes by study arm after Year 1 (post); Healthy Children, Strong Families intervention among American Indian families with young children (2–5-year-olds), Wisconsin, USA
| Mailed group | Mentored group | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | Post | Baseline | Post | ||||||
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
|
| |
| Adult | |||||||||
| BMI (kg/m2) | 31·3 | 8·2 | 30·8 | 8·1 | 33·0 | 7·3 | 32·7 | 7·0 | 0·495 |
| Television on (min) | 415·0 | 304·0 | 374·0 | 317·0 | 454·0 | 337·0 | 416·0 | 362·0 | 0·945 |
| Television watching (min) | 123·0 | 83·0 | 98·0 | 91·0 | 127·0 | 80·0 | 98·0 | 85·0 | 0·810 |
| Activity count (accelerometer) | 48·9 | 25·2 | 44·1 | 19·3 | 43·7 | 20·0 | 43·2 | 19·6 | 0·467 |
| Sedentary time (%) | 73·0 | 6·6 | 74·5 | 7·1 | 72·9 | 7·8 | 74·1 | 8·0 | 0·888 |
| Fruit/vegetable intake (servings/d) | 1·8 | 1·2 | 2·0 | 1·3 | 1·8 | 1·2 | 2·1 | 1·3 | 0·798 |
| Soda/sugar intake (servings/d) | 2·2 | 2·1 | 2·1 | 2·0 | 1·8 | 1·5 | 1·4 | 1·4 | 0·520 |
| Activity change efficacy score | 15·9 | 3·9 | 19·2 | 3·7 | 15·6 | 4·4 | 17·2 | 3·9 | 0·343 |
| Nutrition change efficacy score | 12·4 | 3·1 | 14·1 | 2·2 | 12·2 | 3·0 | 14·0 | 2·2 | 0·886 |
| Physical Health score | 49·5 | 8·8 | 49·4 | 9·3 | 48·3 | 9·7 | 50·7 | 7·8 | 0·182 |
| Mental Health score | 43·2 | 12·1 | 46·0 | 9·2 | 41·3 | 12·3 | 46·1 | 9·2 | 0·378 |
| Child | |||||||||
| BMI (kg/m2) | 17·5 | 2·5 | 18·0 | 3·2 | 17·3 | 1·6 | 17·9 | 2·5 | 0·701 |
| BMI | 1·1 | 1·2 | 1·2 | 1·1 | 1·1 | 1·0 | 1·2 | 1·0 | 0·937 |
| BMI (percentile) | 75·5 | 23·0 | 79·0 | 20·0 | 78·8 | 20·7 | 82·0 | 18·8 | 0·913 |
| Television on (min) | 413·0 | 282·0 | 333·0 | 270·0 | 460·0 | 347·0 | 443·0 | 379·0 | 0·270 |
| Television watching (min) | 119·0 | 84·0 | 98·0 | 69·0 | 113·0 | 76·0 | 107·0 | 67·0 | 0·378 |
| Activity count (accelerometer) | 85·0 | 31·0 | 94·7 | 38·0 | 94·7 | 35·0 | 100·0 | 31·0 | 0·656 |
| Sedentary time (%) | 61·5 | 8·1 | 62·8 | 7·4 | 60·5 | 7·1 | 58·6 | 7·3 | 0·129 |
| Fruit/vegatable intake (servings/d) | 1·2 | 0·9 | 1·6 | 1·0 | 1·4 | 1·0 | 1·7 | 1·2 | 0·527 |
| Soda/sugar intake (servings/d) | 0·8 | 0·8 | 0·9 | 1·0 | 0·9 | 0·8 | 0·9 | 0·9 | 0·142 |
Time×treatment interaction effect assessed by repeated-measures ANOVA with study arm (mailed toolkit only v. mentor-delivered toolkit) as between-subjects factor.
Participants who were pregnant for either measurement were excluded from the analyses.
Adult and child outcomes for combined study arms (mailed group + mentored group) after Year 1 (post); Healthy Children, Strong Families intervention among American Indian families with young children (2–5-year-olds), Wisconsin, USA
| Baseline | Post | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
|
| |
| Adult | |||||
| BMI (kg/m2) | 32·0 | 7·9 | 31·6 | 7·7 | 0·090 |
| Television on (min) | 431·0 | 318·0 | 392·0 | 336·0 | 0·136 |
| Television watching (min) | 125·0 | 82·0 | 98·0 | 88·0 | <0·01 |
| Activity count (accelerometer) | 46·7 | 23·0 | 43·7 | 19·0 | 0·236 |
| Sedentary time (%) | 72·9 | 7·1 | 74·3 | 7·4 | 0·182 |
| Fruit/vegetable intake (servings/d) | 1·8 | 1·2 | 2·0 | 1·3 | 0·177 |
| Soda/sugar intake (servings/d) | 2·0 | 1·9 | 1·8 | 1·8 | 0·135 |
| Activity change efficacy score | 15·8 | 4·1 | 18·4 | 10·1 | <0·01 |
| Nutrition change efficacy score | 12·3 | 3·0 | 14·0 | 2·4 | <0·001 |
| Physical Health score | 49·0 | 9·1 | 49·9 | 8·7 | 0·337 |
| Mental Health score | 42·5 | 12·1 | 46·0 | 9·7 | <0·01 |
| Child | |||||
| BMI (kg/m2) | 17·4 | 2·2 | 17·9 | 3·0 | <0·01 |
| BMI | 1·1 | 1·1 | 1·2 | 1·0 | 0·035 |
| BMI (percentile) | 76·8 | 22·0 | 80·1 | 19·6 | 0·020 |
| Television on (min) | 434·0 | 311·0 | 381·0 | 325·0 | 0·061 |
| Television watching (min) | 116·0 | 80·0 | 102·0 | 68·0 | <0·05 |
| Activity count (accelerometer) | 89·4 | 32·7 | 97·1 | 31·2 | 0·128 |
| Sedentary time (%) | 61·1 | 7·6 | 60·9 | 7·6 | 0·898 |
| Fruit/vegetable intake (servings/d) | 1·3 | 0·9 | 1·6 | 1·1 | <0·01 |
| Soda/sugar intake (servings/d) | 0·9 | 0·8 | 0·9 | 0·9 | 0·961 |
The mailed and mentored groups were combined for these analyses. Both groups received the exact same intervention materials: one group received the materials through the mail, while the second group received the materials during an in-home mentoring visit.
Time effect measured by repeated-measures ANOVA.
Participants who were pregnant for either measurement were excluded from the analyses.
Fig. 2Adult BMI (a) and child BMI percentile (b) by weight status (, normal weight; , overweight; , obese class I (adults)/obese (children); , obese class II (adults only)) at baseline, post-intervention (Year 1) and follow-up (Year 2) for combined study arms (mailed group plus mentored group); Healthy Children, Strong Families intervention among American Indian families with young children (2–5-year-olds), Wisconsin, USA. Data are presented as means with their standard errors represented by vertical bars
Sample focus group thematic content and adult participant quotations; Healthy Children, Strong Families intervention among American Indian families with young children (2–5-year-olds), Wisconsin, USA
| Major theme | Participant comments |
|---|---|
| Increased family time | ‘No more eating in their rooms. We’ve been trying to sit at the table and just talk. It’s fun to just relax with no TV and catch up with your kids.’ |
| ‘It creates opportunities to spend more time together. My kids love it. It gets difficult to make time, so when projects come in the mail, they want to do it, even the older kids who are 8 and 11.’ | |
| ‘My daughter loved the books. We got to read them at nighttime, and it was a healthy book, so it was a new way and fun way for her to learn about healthy habits.’ | |
| Child as change agent | ‘My daughter would share everything we learned, like when we’d go to my mom’s, she’d say: “You guys really should be drinking water.” So, it helped that she was learning so much, because she was sharing the information.’ |
| ‘I don’t think my son will let me forget. He’s the one who started to bring me back after I floundered and did whatever I wanted to.’ | |
| Increased physical activity | ‘I never wanted to do anything. Now I’m getting to the point where I’m trying to tell them, ”Let’s get up and go.” I’m getting more energy.’ |
| ‘Thanks to the program, we are trying to get more involved with them during their playtime outside.’ | |
| Increased knowledge and efficacy for change | ‘It gave me extra encouragement to learn and try to improve our eating habits. I read more articles and got back to reading labels carefully for ingredients and amounts. I liked the books, games, and activity ideas to use to provide fun alternatives to watching too much TV.’ |
| ‘The lessons are very helpful. It’s like having parenting assistance, and when we get stuff in the mail it helps me set the pace for the month.’ | |
| ‘We are more aware of what we’re eating and drinking. We look at the ingredients and I even have the kids help me read the labels.’ |
TV, television.