Two tested interventions help improve weight management in children with overweight or obesity
Massachusetts General Hospital News Jun 09, 2017
Two interventions that link clinical care with community resources helped improve key health measures in children with overweight or obesity at the outset of the study.
As reported in JAMA Pediatrics journal, both programs  developed by investigators at MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC) and Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, a practice of Atrius Health  not only improved body mass index (BMI) in participants but also increased parents sense that they had the information and resources to address their childÂs weight problem.
ÂTo help us create our interventions we looked to families with children who had managed to improve their BMI, often under challenging environmental and social settings. These Âpositive outlier families provided guidance on the content of health coaching, available resources in the community, language to use in motivating other families to change and the importance of building parents confidence in taking on the challenge of reducing their childÂs excess weight, said Elsie Taveras, MD, MPH, chief of General Pediatrics at MassGeneral Hospital for Children, who led the study.
The Connect 4 Health trial was conducted from June 2014 through March 2016 at six Harvard Vanguard pediatric practices in the Boston area and enrolled 721 children, ages 2 through 12, with a BMI in the overweight or obese range. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two interventions  enhanced primary care or enhanced primary care plus coaching.
Parents of those in both groups received educational materials focusing on key goals  decreasing screen time and consumption of sugar–sweetened beverages, improving diet quality, increasing moderate or vigorous physical activity, improving the quality and duration of sleep, and promoting social and emotional wellness. The enhanced primary care intervention  incorporating practices introduced at Harvard Vanguard in recent years  included monthly text message to parents with links to publicly available resources to support behavioral change and a Neighborhood Resource Guide listing supportive facilities in their communities.
Parents of children in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group were contacted every other month  either over the phone, via videoconference or in person  by specially trained health coaches who provided individualized support through motivational interviewing, discussion of strategies for addressing and managing obesity risk factors, and identification of supportive resources in families communities. Parents in the coaching groups also received additional educational materials after each coaching session and twice–weekly text messages or emails. Families were offered a free, one–month family membership in local YMCAs and invited to attend a program on healthy grocery shopping.
In general, participants in both groups had improved BMI z scores at the end of the study period, with slightly greater improvement among those in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group. Comparisons with measurements taken a year before the outset of the study indicated that these reductions did not reflect previous trends towards a lower BMI; in fact, both groups had showed trends toward increasing BMI in the year before the study.
Overall, 63 percent of parents in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group and 48 percent of those in the enhance care group felt their participation in the program increased their satisfaction with their childÂs health care services.
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As reported in JAMA Pediatrics journal, both programs  developed by investigators at MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC) and Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates, a practice of Atrius Health  not only improved body mass index (BMI) in participants but also increased parents sense that they had the information and resources to address their childÂs weight problem.
ÂTo help us create our interventions we looked to families with children who had managed to improve their BMI, often under challenging environmental and social settings. These Âpositive outlier families provided guidance on the content of health coaching, available resources in the community, language to use in motivating other families to change and the importance of building parents confidence in taking on the challenge of reducing their childÂs excess weight, said Elsie Taveras, MD, MPH, chief of General Pediatrics at MassGeneral Hospital for Children, who led the study.
The Connect 4 Health trial was conducted from June 2014 through March 2016 at six Harvard Vanguard pediatric practices in the Boston area and enrolled 721 children, ages 2 through 12, with a BMI in the overweight or obese range. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two interventions  enhanced primary care or enhanced primary care plus coaching.
Parents of those in both groups received educational materials focusing on key goals  decreasing screen time and consumption of sugar–sweetened beverages, improving diet quality, increasing moderate or vigorous physical activity, improving the quality and duration of sleep, and promoting social and emotional wellness. The enhanced primary care intervention  incorporating practices introduced at Harvard Vanguard in recent years  included monthly text message to parents with links to publicly available resources to support behavioral change and a Neighborhood Resource Guide listing supportive facilities in their communities.
Parents of children in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group were contacted every other month  either over the phone, via videoconference or in person  by specially trained health coaches who provided individualized support through motivational interviewing, discussion of strategies for addressing and managing obesity risk factors, and identification of supportive resources in families communities. Parents in the coaching groups also received additional educational materials after each coaching session and twice–weekly text messages or emails. Families were offered a free, one–month family membership in local YMCAs and invited to attend a program on healthy grocery shopping.
In general, participants in both groups had improved BMI z scores at the end of the study period, with slightly greater improvement among those in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group. Comparisons with measurements taken a year before the outset of the study indicated that these reductions did not reflect previous trends towards a lower BMI; in fact, both groups had showed trends toward increasing BMI in the year before the study.
Overall, 63 percent of parents in the enhanced primary care plus coaching group and 48 percent of those in the enhance care group felt their participation in the program increased their satisfaction with their childÂs health care services.
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