The Healthy Children, Strong Families 2 (HCSF2) Randomized Controlled Trial Improved Healthy Behaviors in American Indian Families with Young Children.

Emily J Tomayko, Ronald J Prince, Kate A Cronin, KyungMann Kim, Tassy Parker, Alexandra K Adams
Author Information
  1. Emily J Tomayko: Nutrition, School of Biological and Population Health Sciences, College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR. ORCID
  2. Ronald J Prince: Departments of Population Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
  3. Kate A Cronin: Departments of Surgery, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI.
  4. KyungMann Kim: Departments of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI. ORCID
  5. Tassy Parker: Department of Family and Community Medicine, School of Medicine, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM. ORCID
  6. Alexandra K Adams: Center for American Indian and Rural Health Equity, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: American Indian (AI) families experience a disproportionate risk of obesity due to a number of complex reasons, including poverty, historic trauma, rural isolation or urban loss of community connections, lack of access to healthy foods and physical activity opportunities, and high stress. Home-based obesity prevention interventions are lacking for these families.
OBJECTIVE: Healthy Children, Strong Families 2 (HCSF2) was a randomized controlled trial of a healthy lifestyle promotion/obesity prevention intervention for AI families.
METHODS: Four hundred and fifty dyads consisting of an adult primary caregiver and a child ages 2 to 5 y from 5 AI communities were randomly assigned to a monthly mailed healthy lifestyle intervention toolkit () with social support or to a child safety control toolkit () for 1 y. The toolkit targeted increased fruit/vegetable (F/V) intake and physical activity, improved sleep, decreased added sugar intake and screen time, and improved stress management (adults only). Anthropometrics were collected, and health behaviors were assessed via survey at baseline and at the end of Year 1. Adults completed surveys for themselves and the participating child. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to assess change over the intervention period.
RESULTS: Significant improvements to adult and child healthy diet patterns, adult F/V intake, adult moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, home nutrition environment, and adult self-efficacy for health behavior change were observed in compared with families. No changes were observed in adult body mass index (BMI), child BMI z-score, adult stress measures, adult/child sleep and screen time, or child physical activity. Qualitative feedback suggests the intervention was extremely well-received by both the families and our community partners across the 5 participating sites.
CONCLUSIONS: This multi-site community-engaged intervention addressed key gaps regarding family home-based approaches for early obesity prevention in AI communities and showed several significant improvements in health behaviors. Multiple communities are working to sustain intervention efforts. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01776255.

Keywords

Associated Data

ClinicalTrials.gov | NCT01776255

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Grants

  1. P20 GM103474/NIGMS NIH HHS
  2. R01 HL114912/NHLBI NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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