Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Enrolling by invitation
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Obesity
  • Obesity, Childhood
  • Obesity; Familial
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Parallel Assignment Randomization occurs at the level of home visitors who deliver the home visitation program curriculum. Home visitors will be randomized to deliver the home visitation program curriculum with (Experimental comparator) or without (Active Comparator) the obesity prevention enhancement module. Mother-child dyads enrolled in home visitation programs, and who agree to participate in the study, will receive the intervention arm delivered by their home visitor.Masking: Single (Outcomes Assessor)Primary Purpose: Prevention

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 2 years and 125 years
Gender
Only males

Description

More than 40% of children enrolled in federally funded programs are overweight or obese by age 5. Unfortunately, extant obesity efforts have had a limited impact among low-income underserved children, in part because of limitations inherent to existing programs: 1) short duration and low intensity; ...

More than 40% of children enrolled in federally funded programs are overweight or obese by age 5. Unfortunately, extant obesity efforts have had a limited impact among low-income underserved children, in part because of limitations inherent to existing programs: 1) short duration and low intensity; 2) late timing of implementation, when children are already overweight or obese; 3) delivery methods limiting their accessibility and sustainability; and 4) failure to address barriers such as a lack of culturally competent services, poverty, housing instability, and access to care, which interfere with healthy lifestyle changes. To address these gaps, we have integrated simple, evidence-based nutrition and physical activity components as part of the services already delivered by our home visitation partner, Healthy Families America, with the long-term goal to deploy these efforts to Home Visitation Programs (HVPs) nationwide. Annually, over 500 publicly and privately funded HVPs provide nationwide services to more than 650,000 low-income, underserved infants and their families. The home visiting structure is not only an unparalleled model for scalable and sustainable childhood obesity prevention, but it also provides a unique opportunity to understand factors related to the intergenerational transmission of obesity in families who are most at risk. Over the last four years, our transdisciplinary team of researchers, home visiting stakeholders, families, and community stakeholders has integrated evidence-based nutrition and physical activity components into an engaging obesity prevention curriculum delivered in English and Spanish as an enhancement module to the services of our HVP partner. Our pilot work supports the successful integration, feasibility, and preliminary efficacy of integrating obesity prevention as part of HVP services. The proposed study tests the large-scale and sustained impact of home-based obesity prevention on infant's and mothers' obesity outcomes, and studies key mechanisms of maternal and social transmission on infants' obesity risk. Specifically, 300 low-income mothers/infants enrolled in Healthy Families America's HVP will be recruited and enrolled in the study. Based on standard HVP procedures, mothers/infants will be matched to highly trained home visitors based on their ethnicity/race and language preferences. Home visitors, in turn, will be randomly assigned to deliver the standard HVP curriculum only or the standard HVP curriculum + obesity prevention as part of their weekly home visits, for the first 18 months of HVP services. Comprehensive assessments of mothers/infants will be conducted at enrollment and after 6 and 18 months of intervention. Aim 1 (maternal and infant outcomes). Test the direct effects of obesity prevention on infants and mothers' weight, metabolic risks, diet/energy intake, and physical activity. This will be accomplished by comparing changes in body weight, metabolic markers, and eating and activity-related behaviors between infants/mothers across study arms (HVP only vs. HVP+obesity prevention). These results will indicate whether HVP is an effective infrastructure for primary and secondary obesity prevention. Aim 2 (maternal transmission). Test whether breastfeeding and maternal diet and activity, feeding practices, and food insecurity mediate the effect of obesity prevention on infants' outcomes. This aim will test mechanisms of maternal transmission on infants' obesity risks. Aim 3 (social transmission). Aim 3 is two-pronged. Aim 3a tests the direct effect of HVP+obesity prevention (vs. HVP only) on the characteristics of the social and community networks that surround mothers and infants (i.e., the density, composition, and quality of health support networks). Aim 3b tests whether the characteristics of social networks mediate the effects of obesity prevention on maternal and infant outcomes. These findings will indicate if the delivery of in-home obesity prevention efforts can alter and/or activate social network mechanisms. Secondary Aim. Conduct a real-life economic analysis (costs, cost-savings, and non-monetary benefits) of integrating obesity prevention into existing HVPs. This proposal addresses the impetus to develop interventions targeting at-risk infants before obesity is established. Although maternal-infant interventions are much-needed, they present implementation and dissemination challenges, including limitations on compliance and retention, and limited potential for scalability and sustainability. Our proposed strategy overcomes these challenges through an innovative solution that merges evidence-based nutrition and activity components into an existing, ongoing federally-funded infrastructure. The proposed research is timely as the Institute of Medicine, the United States Department of Agriculture, and Health and Human Services (DHHS) extend their recommendations to address key factors influencing obesity risk in children from birth to 24 months of age.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03529695
Collaborators
  • Antelope Valley Partners for Health
  • Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
  • Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Kayla de la Haye, PhD University of Southern California Principal Investigator: Sarah-Jeanne Salvy, PhD Cedars-Sinai Medical Center