医学
干预(咨询)
星团(航天器)
体重管理
整群随机对照试验
随机对照试验
物理疗法
儿科
家庭医学
超重
体质指数
内科学
护理部
计算机科学
程序设计语言
作者
Ann M. Davis,Brittany Lancaster,Kandace Fleming,Rebecca Swinburne Romine,Bethany Forseth,Eve‐Lynn Nelson,Meredith Dreyer Gillette,Myles S. Faith,Debra K. Sullivan,Kelley Pettee Gabriel,Kelsey Dean,Megan Olalde
摘要
Youth in rural areas are disproportionally affected by obesity. Given the unique barriers rural populations face, tailoring and increasing access to obesity interventions is necessary.This paper evaluates the effectiveness of iAmHealthy, a family-based paediatric obesity intervention delivered to rural children, compared to a Newsletter Control.Participating schools (n = 18) were randomly assigned to iAmHealthy or Newsletter Control. iAmHealthy consists of individual health coaching and group sessions delivered via televideo to a participant's home. The child and parent's body mass index (BMI), child physical activity and child dietary intake were assessed at baseline, post-treatment (8 months) and follow-up (20 months). Multilevel modeling estimated the effect of treatment at both time points.Parent and child dyads were recruited (n = 148) and randomised to iAmHealthy (n = 64) or the Control group (n = 84). The Control group had significant increases in child BMIz from baseline to follow-up. iAmHealthy youth had no significant changes in BMIz from baseline to post or follow-up. Child dietary intake, physical activity and parent BMI results are also discussed.This trial extends previous paediatric obesity work by simultaneously increasing convenience and dose of treatment. Results suggest iAmHealthy resulted in a change in BMIz trajectories and long-term health behaviour for youth.
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