AI Article Synopsis

  • Family-based behavioral treatment (FBT) is an effective method for reducing obesity in children, but access is often limited, which led to this study comparing FBT combined with enhanced standard of care (eSOC) against eSOC alone.
  • The trial involved children aged 6-15 with obesity and their caregivers, assessing outcomes over 12 months through regular health coaching and guidelines-based treatment approaches.
  • The results aim to provide insights into the effectiveness of these interventions in primary care settings, focusing on changes in child weight, parent weight, psychosocial factors, and obesity-related risks.

Article Abstract

Background: Family-based behavioral treatment (FBT) is an effective intensive health behavior and lifestyle treatment for obesity reduction in children and adolescents, but families have limited access. The purpose of this randomized, pragmatic, comparative effectiveness trial was to examine changes in child relative weight in a 12-month, enhanced standard of care (eSOC) intervention combined with FBT (eSOC+FBT) vs. eSOC alone.

Methods: Children aged 6 to 15 years with obesity, and their primary caregiver, were recruited from primary care clinics. Families were randomized 1:1 to eSOC, a staged approach led by the primary care provider that gradually intensified dependent on a child's response to care and aligns with the American Medical Association guidelines, or the eSOC+FBT arm, which included regular meetings with a health coach for healthy eating, physical activity, positive parenting strategies, and managing social and environmental cues. Both treatments align with the 2023 American Academy of Pediatrics clinical practice guidelines. Assessments occurred at baseline, midpoint (month 6), end-of-intervention (month 12), and follow-up (month 18). Primary outcome was change from baseline to 12 months in child percent overweight (percentage above the median body mass index in the general US population normalized for age and sex). Secondary outcomes were parent weight, child psychosocial factors, heterogeneity of treatment effects, and cardiometabolic risk factors. Exploratory outcomes assessed reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance.

Conclusion: This pragmatic trial will generate evidence for the comparative effectiveness of implementing two guidelines-based approaches in primary care for obesity reduction in children and adolescents.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03843424.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10922779PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2024.107459DOI Listing

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