This study aims to evaluate the outcomes of an existing clinical program that teaches families of children with overweight and obesity healthy lifestyle. The design will be unblinded, randomized, waitlist control.
The participants will come from the cohort of patients who are referred to the Get Up \& Go program and decide to enroll. For this existing family healthy weight program, the child must be between 6 and 14 years of age at time of program start, with BMI by report of ≥ 85th percentile. The child must be able to participate in physical activity comparable to an elementary school PE class and must be able to function cognitively at or above the level of a 6 year old. The process for enrollment in this program begins with a standard referral that goes to the Get Up \& Go office at Children's Health. Staff will make referred families aware of study at initial contact; staff generally place a call to families to give overview of Get Up \& Go. Office staff tell interested families that they will be contacted closer to the time of class start. Whether or not the family answers the phone, the family is mailed a welcome packet. For the study, the Get Up \& Go staff will inform families by phone that they may qualify for a study that performs additional measures to help understand the effect of the program. These families will hear that study participation is optional. The staff will tell the families that a study coordinator will call or text unless the family says they do not want to be contacted. The welcome packet will include a page with the same information and an opt-out postcard. To enroll in this study, the parent must speak English or Spanish. The study coordinator will call families who have not declined contact, up to 5 times at different times of day. When they reach the family, they will review the study protocol and invite participation. The coordinator will review the study protocol, explaining that participation will mean a 1-hour visit measure several weeks prior to class start and agreement to accept randomization to immediate start or 3 months deferment. If family wants to enroll, the consent will be reviewed, and all questions answered. The parent will verbally consent and will receive a copy of the (unsigned per IRB waiver) consent via email. The child will assent. If families prefer, they can defer consent or assent until the in-person appointment for measurement. A study coordinator will schedule a time 1-4 weeks before the start of the Get Up \& Go class to meet with a small group (1-5) of study families at either the YMCA or at Children's Health to perform baseline measures. If any families were interested but did not consent virtually, they will undergo consenting process at this time. When measures (see description below) are complete, a simple 1:1 randomization will be done, using a computer software program that generates random sequence. Neither research team nor family will be blinded to assignment 1. Intervention: immediate participation 2. Control: Waitlist, deferring participation for approximately 3 months, to the next quarter The wait list control subjects will receive no intervention for 3 months. They will undergo a Time 2 measure and then begin participation in the session at the subsequent quarter. Data collected will include height, weight, %BMIp95, endurance via PACER test. Survey data: The Family and Nutrition and Physical Activity (FNPA) and Behavior Assessment Questionnaire (BAQ). Optional data: Parental height, weight, and BMI. Each quarter, approximately 40 families will be enrolled, with 20 randomized to start immediately and 20 to wait until the subsequent quarter. Cohorts will be recruited each quarter for 4-5 quarters until enrollment is complete.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
160
This study evaluates an established pediatric healthy weight program, Get Up \& Go. There are 10 weekly sessions for child (ages 6-14 years) and parent. Each 90-minutes session includes an interactive lesson on some aspect of healthy living, a fun game or physical activity that involves both children and parents, a healthy snack, and a time for families to set a lifestyle change goal for the week and to review achievement of goals set the prior week. Virtual components bring the total content exposure to over 26 hours provided. Curriculum: Principles of healthy living Healthy eating basics Division of responsibility Nutrition 101 Bullying prevention Meal time Advertising and dining Grocery store tour Graduation
University of Texas Southwestern, Children's Health
Dallas, Texas, United States
RECRUITINGBMI status
Change in child BMI status, using %BMIp95 as primary outcome and BMI z score. Both are calculations made from weight, height, sex, and age.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention period at 3 months
Family Nutrition and Physical Activity (FNPA)
Family Nutrition and Physical Activity (FNPA), a validated 30-item questionnaire from the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, will be completed by parent. The questions ask about home practices related to nutrition, physical activity, sleep and other health routines. The instrument has been broadly utilized since it was validated in 2009 . The FNPA has been used to assess modifiable healthy lifestyle behaviors, with an emphasis on behaviors that contribute to obesity . Each questions are rated on a scale of 1 to 4. Higher aggregate scores point to healthier decision making. Lower scores point to less healthy behaviors.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention period at 3 months
BAQ: Behavior Assessment Questionnaire
Behavior Assessment Questionnaire (BAQ) is a self reported tool measuring a child's lifestyle behaviors. It examines frequency of habits such as eating, activity, emotional health, sleep, and environment. Each of the 10 questions has 4 response options describing frequency or timing of stem question. The responses are assigned scores of 0-4, and total scores are converted to a 0-100 scale. Higher aggregate scores point to healthier habits, and lower scores point to less healthy behaviors.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention period at 3 months
Endurance (PACER)
Progressive Aerobic Cardiovascular Endurance Run (PACER): participants run a 15 m distance at a progressively faster pace, and the score is the number of laps successfully completed
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention period at 3 months
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Parental Weight Measures
Optional: Parent BMI, using absolute BMI (kg/m2)
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of intervention period at 3 months