Childhood Obesity MI for Pediatricians
There remains a compelling need for evidenced-based intervention models to assist primary care practitioners to treat their overweight pediatric patients. We will conduct an efficacy trial to test two potentially generalizable interventions that address many of the key barriers to obesity counseling in pediatric primary care.
2007-04-01 23:55
2013-01-31 23:55
Active
National Heart, Lung, & Blood Institute
University of Michigan School of Public Health
BMI, obesity, overweight, children, parents, pediatrician, primary care practitioner, motivational interviewing, MI
Exploratory Aims & Analyses:
EA1) Cost Effectiveness. We will examine cost effectiveness of the interventions using cost per BMI percentile change as the primary metric as well as the number of outpatient and emergency department visits.
EA2) Moderator effects. We hypothesize that children in Group 3 from the upper end of the BMI distribution, i.e., > 95th percentile will show greater change in BMI percentile than their counterparts in Group 2, i.e., baseline weight will interact with Group membership. We will also explore whether parent baseline BMI predicts child response to the intervention.
EA3) Mediation effects. We will explore whether changes in child BMI (if observed) are explained by changes in diet and physical activity behaviors assessed by accelerometer (50% subsample), 24hr diet and activity recalls (50% subsample), and the brief behavior screener completed by all parents.
This Project will be conducted with children ages 2-8 and their caregiver recruited from primary care pediatric practices in 4 regions of the PROS (Pediatric Research in Office Settings) Network of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). The counseling will occur with the parent. Children will generally be absent from the room at the time of the counseling. We will work with a total of 30 PROS practices (20 children per practice).
We will employ a cluster-randomized design, with PROS practice as the unit of randomization to test two potentially generalizable, behavioral interventions, of varying intensity, compared to a minimal intensity/Usual Care Group.
Group 1 (Usual Care) will include determination of BMI percentile at baseline, 1 year, and 2 year follow up for a cohort of youth with a baseline BMI > 85th and < 97th percentile. UC practitioners will also be provided with a series of nutrition and physical activity tip sheets as well as a videotape that demonstrates effective feeding practices developed by CDC for our HLS pilot study. UC pediatricians (PEDs) will also be provided with a 1/2 day study orientation and a brief CME-type workshop addressing obesity treatment guidelines. At the end of the two year study, UC PEDs will be offered the complete MI training and DVD materials.
Group 2 (PED ONLY) will include the same assessment points, enrollment criterion and educational materials as UC. In addition, pediatricians (PEDs) will receive 2.0 days of in-person training in MI (1.5 days) and Behavior Therapy (1/2 day) plus 2 telephone-based supervision sessions. PEDs will also receive an interactive DVD MI booster training system focusing on pediatric obesity that will be developed during year 1 of this study. PEDs in Group 2 will schedule 3 proactive counseling sessions with the parent of the index child in Year 1 and 1 additional visit in year 2 year. PEDs will be provided with a behavioral screener adapted from the instrument used in our HLS pilot study, to help families identify and prioritize their behavioral goals. PEDs will be reimbursed $50 per visit for the 4 study visits.
Group 3 (PED+RD) will include the same intervention components as Group 2, but adds the involvement of a trained dietitian. RDs will deliver 6 MI-based counseling sessions over 2 years, front loaded with 4 of the sessions in Year 1 and 2 in Year 2. The RD sessions will be delivered both in-person (visit 1) and optionally by telephone. Similar to PEDs, RDs will receive 2.0 days of in-person MI (1.5 days) and Behavior Therapy (1/2 day) training plus 2 telephone-based supervision sessions; and an interactive DVD MI booster training system focusing on pediatric obesity tailored to RDs. RDs will be compensated $50 per in-person visit and $35 for telephone sessions.
study in progress
study in progress
study in progress
pediatricians
face-to-face, DVD, telephone