Parent Partnership Project
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Obesity Weight Loss |
Therapuetic Areas: | Endocrinology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 7 - 11 |
Updated: | 3/1/2014 |
Start Date: | January 2013 |
End Date: | August 2014 |
Peer Counseling in Family-Based Pediatric Overweight Treatment
To evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of peers as interventionists in delivering
family-based behavioral pediatric weight control intervention.
family-based behavioral pediatric weight control intervention.
A new model of delivering family-based pediatric overweight treatment that decreases costs
but sustains short- and long-term efficacy is needed. One possible opportunity for this is a
peer intervention model in which families receiving professionally-led intervention then
subsequently providing intervention to other families. In addition, peer interventionists'
continued engagement in the behavior change process through providing intervention to others
could improve their own long-term efficacy. The project begins with the standard approach of
having professional interventionists provide family-based behavioral pediatric overweight
treatment to overweight children and their parent (1st generation families; n=30).
Subsequently, half of 1st generation families will be randomly assigned to serve as peer
interventionists to other overweight parents and children (2nd generation families; n=30).
The remaining 1st generation families will neither receive nor provide any additional
treatment. This project aims to develop the peer intervention training and delivery and then
to examine the feasibility and acceptability of the peer intervention. This project also
aims to derive an estimate of the efficacy of peer intervention (receiving and providing)
both at the end of receiving treatment and 6 months later, as well as the impact of
providing intervention on peer interventionists' weight outcomes.
but sustains short- and long-term efficacy is needed. One possible opportunity for this is a
peer intervention model in which families receiving professionally-led intervention then
subsequently providing intervention to other families. In addition, peer interventionists'
continued engagement in the behavior change process through providing intervention to others
could improve their own long-term efficacy. The project begins with the standard approach of
having professional interventionists provide family-based behavioral pediatric overweight
treatment to overweight children and their parent (1st generation families; n=30).
Subsequently, half of 1st generation families will be randomly assigned to serve as peer
interventionists to other overweight parents and children (2nd generation families; n=30).
The remaining 1st generation families will neither receive nor provide any additional
treatment. This project aims to develop the peer intervention training and delivery and then
to examine the feasibility and acceptability of the peer intervention. This project also
aims to derive an estimate of the efficacy of peer intervention (receiving and providing)
both at the end of receiving treatment and 6 months later, as well as the impact of
providing intervention on peer interventionists' weight outcomes.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Child age: 7-11 years at time of enrollment
- Overweight child: at or above 85th percentile for age- and gender-specific BMI.
- At least one overweight parent (BMI≥ 25.0).
- Parent is willing and able to actively participate in treatment including willingness
to serve as a peer interventionist following treatment.
- Must live within 50 miles of the treatment center.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Current enrollment in another weight control program for the participating child or
parent.
- The participating parent is pregnant.
- Thought disorder, suicidality, or substance abuse disorder in either the
participating parent or the participating child.
- Inability of the child to comprehend English at a 1st-grade level or participating
parent to comprehend English at an 8th-grade level.
- Physical disability or illness in either the participating parent or the child that
precludes moderate intensity physical activity.
- Medication regimen for the child that affects his or her weight.
- Conditions known to promote obesity in the participating child (e.g. Prader-Willi).
- Diagnosed eating disorder (i.e., anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa, binge eating
disorder) in either parent (participating and nonparticipating) and/or the
participating child.
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