Nourishing Our Understanding of Role Modeling to Improve Support and Health (NOURISH): design and methods

Suzanne E Mazzeo, Nichole R Kelly, Marilyn Stern, Rachel W Gow, Kasey Serdar, Ronald K Evans, Resa M Jones, Cynthia M Bulik, Suzanne E Mazzeo, Nichole R Kelly, Marilyn Stern, Rachel W Gow, Kasey Serdar, Ronald K Evans, Resa M Jones, Cynthia M Bulik

Abstract

Pediatric overweight is associated with numerous physical and psychological health risks, and overweight children are at significant risk for obesity in adulthood. African-American children are at particularly high risk for obesity and related health complications. However, this racial group has traditionally had limited access to obesity treatment and relatively few studies have included sufficient numbers of lower-SES, African American participants. Further, although parental involvement in treatment for pediatric overweight has been found to be beneficial, few studies have examined the efficacy of offering treatment exclusively to parents, a potentially cost-effective approach which could benefit the entire family. This pilot project will evaluate the efficacy of an intensive parenting intervention, (NOURISH; Nourishing Our Understanding of Role modeling to Improve Support and Health), targeting racially diverse parents of overweight children (ages 6-11). NOURISH addresses several urgent research priorities by targeting the underserved and addressing the significant disparity in obesity treatment services. Parents meeting study criteria (having a child between the ages of 6 and 11 with a BMI ≥ the 85th percentile) will be offered participation in the randomized trial comparing NOURISH with a control group. We hypothesize that children whose parents participate in NOURISH will manifest greater decreases in BMI, and greater improvements in dietary intake, and quality of life compared to children whose parents do not participate. This study is designed explicitly to gather preliminary feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness data to inform a subsequent larger randomized controlled trial.

Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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