The goal of this project is to evaluate an adapted health promotion program, HomeGrown, designed to improve the health of young children with Down syndrome by supporting families in making healthy home environmental changes. There is a significant need for evidence-based programs that address healthy eating and physical activity within this population, as most existing interventions have been developed for typically developing children. By tailoring the program to the unique needs of families of young children with Down syndrome, this project aims to advance inclusion and equity in health behavior promotion. This R61/R33 study will assess the feasibility (R61 Phase) and subsequent efficacy (R33 Phase) of the HomeGrown program in improving family practices related to nutrition and physical activity. During the R61 feasibility phase, 38 primary caregivers of children aged 2-6 years with Down syndrome will be enrolled in a 6-month randomized controlled trial. Families will be randomized 1:1 to either the HomeGrown intervention or a waitlist control group (6-month delayed start), stratified by the child's biological sex (male/female) and age (2-3 vs. 4-6 years). All measures will be collected at baseline and at 6-month follow-up. The R61 feasibility phase will address three specific aims: Accrual: Achieve an enrollment rate of 10 families per month, supporting feasibility for the R33 efficacy phase. Engagement: Demonstrate that families use at least 70% of available HomeGrown intervention components, measured using the digital behavior change interventions engagement scale. Data Collection \& Retention: Achieve at least 80% retention with completion of all outcome assessments. By addressing key gaps in nutrition and physical activity research for young children with Down syndrome, this study has the potential to improve health outcomes for an underserved population and inform future clinical and community health promotion efforts.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
38
The implementation model for supporting home environment changes focuses on engaging families in Homegrown, giving them access to interactive online tools and resources that guide behavior change, and providing monthly support check-in calls as they work to adopt evidence-based healthy eating and physical activity practices at home. Families will participate in the 6-month program with support from a trained health educator. The HomeGrown program begins with a family orientation session, followed by access to the HomeGrown web application. Participants will have access to HomeGrown intervention which is a 6-month program that helps families improve healthy eating and physical activity at home. Families start with an orientation session, then use the HomeGrown web application with interactive tools and resources. Monthly check-in calls with a trained health educator provide guidance and support throughout the program.
Participants will have a 1-hour training with the interventionist to learn how to use a website (not HomeGrown). Access to HomeGrown will be provided after the 6-month study is completed.
UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States
Accrual Rate
Percent of eligible participants who agreed to join study.
Time frame: Baseline
Participant Engagement
Digital behavior change engagement scale will be measured as number of participants completed digital intervention.
Time frame: 6 months
Participant Retention
Percent of participants who completed 6-month measures.
Time frame: 6 months
Child Physical Activity
GT3X+ accelerometers (ActiGraph, Pensacola, FL) are small wearable devices that measure movement and physical activity levels. worn on children's waist for 7 consecutive days. Reminders about wearing and returning the device will be sent via email/text throughout each assessment period. Video instructions will also be available through the web application. Accelerometer data will be used to calculate the number of minutes participants spend in each physical activity level (sedentary, light, moderate, vigorous, and total non-sedentary).
Time frame: 6 months
Child Diet Quality
Caregivers will complete 24-hour dietary recalls to report their child's food and beverage intake using the Automated Self-Administered 24-hour (ASA24) Dietary Assessment Tool. Caregivers will receive a standardized email with login details, instructions, and a prompt to complete the recall, followed by a reminder text on their assigned recall days. If a recall is still not completed, data collectors will make a final attempt to complete it with the caregiver by phone. Using the ASA24 output, Healthy Eating Index-Toddlers-2020 (HEI-2020) scores will be calculated. The HEI-2020 reflects how closely a child's diet aligns with dietary guidelines, with scores ranging from 0 to 100; higher scores indicate better diet quality.
Time frame: 6 months
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