Efficacy of a Primary Care eHealth Obesity Treatment Pilot Intervention Developed for Vulnerable Pediatric Patients.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS Childhood Obesity Pub Date : 2024-03-01 Epub Date: 2023-03-09 DOI:10.1089/chi.2022.0185
Joshua S Yudkin, Marlyn A Allicock, Folefac D Atem, Carol A Galeener, Sarah E Messiah, Sarah E Barlow
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Abstract

Background: Challenges to treat excess weight in primary care settings include time constraints during encounters and barriers to multiple visits for patient families, especially those from vulnerable backgrounds. Dynamo Kids! (DK), a bilingual (English/Spanish) e-health intervention, was created to address these system-level challenges. This pilot study assessed the effect of DK use on parent-reported healthy habits and child BMI. Methods: In this 3-month, quasi-experimental cohort design, DK was offered to parents with children aged 6-12 years with BMI ≥85th percentile in three public primary care sites in Dallas, Texas. DK included three educational modules, one tracking tool, recipes, and links to internet resources. Parents completed an online survey before and after 3 months. Pre-post changes in family nutrition and physical activity (FNPA) scores, clinic-measured child %BMIp95, and self-reported parent BMI were assessed using mixed-effects linear regression modeling. Results: A total of 73 families (mean child age = 9.3 years; 87% Hispanic, 12% non-Hispanic Black, and 77% Spanish-speaking families) completed the baseline survey (participants) and 46 (63%) used the DK site (users). Among users, pre-post changes (mean [standard deviation]) showed an increase in FNPA scores (3.0 [6.3], p = 0.01); decrease in child %BMIp95 (-1.03% [5.79], p = 0.22); and decrease in parent BMI (-0.69 [1.76], p = 0.04). Adjusted models showed -0.02% [95% confidence interval: -0.03 to -0.01] change in child %BMIp95 for each minute spent on the DK website. Conclusions: DK demonstrated a significant increase in parent FNPA scores and decrease in self-reported parent BMI. e-Health interventions may overcome barriers and require a lower dosage than in-person interventions.

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为弱势儿科患者开发的初级保健电子健康肥胖症治疗试点干预的效果。
背景:在基层医疗机构治疗体重超标面临的挑战包括就诊时间有限,以及患者家庭(尤其是弱势家庭)多次就诊的障碍。Dynamo Kids!(DK) 是一种双语(英语/西班牙语)电子健康干预措施,旨在应对这些系统层面的挑战。这项试点研究评估了使用 DK 对家长报告的健康习惯和儿童体重指数的影响。研究方法在这项为期 3 个月的准实验队列设计中,德克萨斯州达拉斯市的三个公共初级保健机构向有 BMI ≥ 85th 百分位数的 6-12 岁儿童的家长提供了 DK。DK 包括三个教育模块、一个跟踪工具、食谱和互联网资源链接。家长们在 3 个月前和 3 个月后完成了一项在线调查。采用混合效应线性回归模型评估了家庭营养和体力活动(FNPA)评分、诊所测量的儿童体重指数(%BMIp95)和家长自我报告的体重指数的前后变化。结果:共有 73 个家庭(平均儿童年龄 = 9.3 岁;87% 为西班牙裔家庭,12% 为非西班牙裔黑人家庭,77% 为西班牙语家庭)完成了基线调查(参与者),46 个家庭(63%)使用了 DK 网站(使用者)。在用户中,前后变化(平均值 [标准差])显示 FNPA 分数增加 (3.0 [6.3],p = 0.01);儿童 BMIp95% 下降 (-1.03% [5.79],p = 0.22);家长 BMI 下降 (-0.69 [1.76],p = 0.04)。调整模型显示,在 DK 网站上每花费 1 分钟,儿童的体重指数 p95 百分比就会有 -0.02% [95% 置信区间:-0.03 至 -0.01]的变化。结论:与面对面干预相比,电子健康干预可以克服障碍,所需剂量也较低。
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来源期刊
Childhood Obesity
Childhood Obesity PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
8.00%
发文量
95
期刊介绍: Childhood Obesity is the only peer-reviewed journal that delivers actionable, real-world obesity prevention and weight management strategies for children and adolescents. Health disparities and cultural sensitivities are addressed, and plans and protocols are recommended to effect change at the family, school, and community level. The Journal also reports on the problem of access to effective healthcare and delivers evidence-based solutions to overcome these barriers.
期刊最新文献
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