This study evaluates the effect of a fully virtual nutrition technical assistance training program for family child care home providers on the food they serve young children in their care and the food environment in their home. Half the providers will be randomly assigned to the nutrition program and the other half will receive a comparison on environmental health.
Early care and education (ECE) providers play a vital role in ensuring that young children have access to nutritious foods. Over 25% of children in ECE (1.2 million children) attend Family Child Care Homes (FCCH). Improvements in the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) may introduce new barriers for FCCH, which have limited meal preparation capacity. Limited research has examined foods served by FCCH providers, and no group randomized trials have been conducted using a Community-Based Participatory approach in FCCH and including an evaluation of intervention costs. Goals: 1. Determine the effectiveness of a virtual, rural outreach community-based Nutrition Technical Assistance Intervention to enhance meeting CACFP best-practices. Methods: Conduct a cross-sectional assessment of a random sample of FCCH providers' (n=54) menus and meals served. Foods will be evaluated against the CACFP requirements and best-practices. Trained Extension Educators will implement both interventions (n=27 intervention, n=27 comparison) focused in rural counties, reaching underserved rural and low-income populations. The intervention is based on theoretical foundations and formative interviews, and will consist of two virtual 60-90-minute one-on-one visits with the FCCH and one virtual group class lasting approximately 3 hours.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
69
Participating family child care home providers in rural counties will be randomized to either the Nutrition Intervention (n=27), or an environmental health comparison group (n=27) that will receive an Integrated Pest Management and Green Cleaning intervention with the same format and visit frequency. Briefly, the Nutrition Technical Assistance Intervention and comparison group will consist of three encounters with our intervention team: two 60-90 minutes virtual one-on-one visits scheduled at the convenience of the family child care home provider and a 3-hour virtual group class session with other providers. Total contact time with intervention staff will be 6 hours. All participants will receive a toolkit. Providers will complete either intervention virtually over a period of three months.
Participating family child care home providers in rural counties will be randomized to either the Nutrition Intervention (n=27), or an environmental health comparison group (n=27) that will receive an Integrated Pest Management and Green Cleaning intervention with the same format and visit frequency. Briefly, the Nutrition Technical Assistance Intervention and comparison group will consist of three encounters with our intervention team: two 60-90 minutes virtual one-on-one visits scheduled at the convenience of the family child care home provider and a 3-hour virtual group class session with other providers. Total contact time with intervention staff will be 6 hours. All participants will receive a toolkit. Providers will complete either intervention virtually over a period of three months.
University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States
Self-reported nutrition practices
Providers report the frequency and type of fruit and vegetables, milk, and salty snacks served using the NAPSACC Self-Report tool virtually/on-paper, tailored for FCCH
Time frame: baseline, changes post 3-months, changes post 12-months
nutrition environment
Self-reporting the EPAO survey virtually/on-paper
Time frame: baseline, changes post 3-months, changes post 12-months
compliance of menu and meal with Child and Adult Care Food Program requirements using compliance scoring tool created by collaborative research team
menus and meals served are compared to the requirements and best practices of the CACFP using compliance scoring tool created by the collaborative research team
Time frame: baseline, changes post 3-months, changes post 12-months
dietary quality of foods served
analysis of remote food photograph of a child's breakfast, lunch, snack
Time frame: baseline, changes post 3-months, changes post 12-months
Provider self-efficacy
providers will self report nutrition and environmental health self-efficacy using using survey created by the collaborative research team virtually/on-paper
Time frame: baseline, post 3-months, post 12-months
Environmental health observation
observation of household cleaners and chemicals and signs of pests virtually, a tool created by the collaborative research team
Time frame: baseline, post 3-months, post 12-months
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