| Literature DB >> 30866878 |
Rinita Dam1,2, Heather Anne Robinson3, Sarah Vince-Cain4, Gill Heaton4, Adam Greenstein5, Matthew Sperrin3, Lamiece Hassan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To measure trends in child growth and combat rising levels of obesity, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Manchester have developed Children's Health and Monitoring Programme (CHAMP). CHAMP collects an annual measurement for primary school children (aged 4 to 11) in Manchester, England, and offers feedback of Body Mass Index (BMI) results to parents via a secure website. No similar digital tool exists that both provides high resolution data on the trajectory of child growth and acts as a feedback and monitoring system. This study investigates how effectively this intervention engaged with parents and supported the reduction of childhood obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Body mass index; Digital intervention; Health education; Mixed methods study; Paediatric obesity; Parents
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30866878 PMCID: PMC6415344 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-019-6618-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Demographics of the sample for the qualitative study
| (a) Parents | (b) Staff |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
| ||
| Male | 2 | Head/acting Head of school | 4 |
| Female | 16 | School Health Assistants | 4 |
| Other school staff | 1 | ||
|
| NHS/ public health manager | 2 | |
| Mean (years) | 34.1 (26–44) | ||
|
| |||
| Mean | 2.5 (1–6) | ||
|
| |||
| White | 12 | ||
| BMEa | 6 | ||
|
| |||
| Yes | 9 | ||
| No | 9 | ||
| Total | 18 | Total | 11 |
aBME - Black and Minority Ethnic
Comparison of children by website registration status
| Variable | Description | Ever registered | Never registered | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participants | All children | 13,536 | 49,801 | |
| Male | % (n) | 50.36 (6817) | 50.68 (25218) | 0.576 |
| Age at start (mean) | years (SD) | 7.30 (2.55) | 7.64 (2.54) | <0.001 |
| Age at start (median) | years (IQR) | 7.25 (4.83–9.99) | 7.83 (4.99–10.24) | <0.001 |
| Deprivation | % (n) | <0.001 | ||
| (IMD rank quintile) | Q1 (most deprived) | 66.94 (9061) | 77.84 (38765) | |
| Q2 | 16.04 (2171) | 12.04 (5997) | ||
| Q3 | 9.53 (1290) | 5.18 (2580) | ||
| Q4 | 4.93 (668) | 2.09 (1039) | ||
| Q5 | 1.54 (209) | 0.62 (311) | ||
| Not known | 1.01 (137) | 2.23 (1109) | ||
| Ethnicity | % (n) | <0.001 | ||
| White | 50.43 (6826) | 32.69 (16281) | ||
| Mixed black/white | 3.66 (496) | 3.42 (1703) | ||
| Black/British black | 7.29 (987) | 12.84 (6396) | ||
| Asian/British Asian | 15.92 (2155) | 19.51 (9718) | ||
| Other | 5.07 (687) | 5.70 (2838) | ||
| Not stated/unknown | 16.98 (2298) | 24.11 (12005) | ||
| First recorded BMI | categorical, % (n) | <0.001 | ||
| Underweight | 1.30 (176) | 1.47 (734) | ||
| Normal weight | 74.99 (10151) | 73.65 (36680) | ||
| Overweight | 12.50 (1692) | 12.40 (6173) | ||
| Obese | 7.28 (985) | 7.82 (3892) | ||
| Severely obese | 3.93 (532) | 4.66 (2322) | ||
| Overweight or obese | 23.71 (3209) | 24.87 (12387) | ||
| Median first recorded BMI2 | kg/m2 (continuous, IQR) | 16.59 (15.43–18.48) | 16.71 (15.48–18.87) | 0.966 |
| Mean annual change in UK90 BMI centile1 | centiles per annum (SD) | −0.47 (±12.14) | 0.51 (±12.21) | <0.001 |
| Median annual change in UK90 BMI centile1 | centiles per annum (IQR) | − 0.14 (−6.01–4.44) | 0.07 (−4.88–5.33) | <0.001 |
| Median time span of recorded BMI values1 | days (IQR) | 396 (365–427) | 397 (366–427) | <0.001 |
| Total number of BMI measurements recorded 2013–2017 | 26,982 | 81,113 | <0.001 | |
| Mean number of BMI measurements recorded per child 2013–2017 | 1.99 | 1.63 | <0.001 |
2Based on values from 34,803 children with multiple recorded measurements 2013/14–2016/17
Summary of UK90 BMI centile movement of children paired in matched case analysis between first and second assessments
| BMI category (child) | Website registered (parent) | n | Median annual centile change3 | % moving towards UK90 50th centile | % constant centile | % moving away from UK90 50th centile |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal weight | Yes | 6016 | −0.68*** | 44.08 | 0.05 | 55.87 |
| No | 12,890 | + 0.30 | 43.69 | 0.02 | 56.30 | |
| Over weight | Yes | 893 | −0.40* | 53.75* | 0.00 | 46.25 |
| No | 2126 | + 0.14 | 48.02 | 0.05 | 51.93 | |
| Obese | Yes | 700 | −0.02 | 53.57 | 4.14 | 42.29 |
| No | 1926 | <0.01 | 49.74 | 4.98 | 45.28 |
3*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01,***P < 0.001
Psychological impacts of CHAMP on families
| Subtheme | Description | Example quote |
|---|---|---|
| A judgement of parenting | Parents may feel judged or reassured, depending on the BMI result | “ |
| Increased reflection and monitoring | CHAMP can prompt parents to stop, reflect and monitor | “ |
| Psychological impacts on children | Concern about children worrying over weight from a young age | “ |