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  4. Implementation of a Family-Based Obesity Intervention Within a Pediatric Primary Care
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Implementation of a Family-Based Obesity Intervention Within a Pediatric Primary Care

Full metadata

Title
Implementation of a Family-Based Obesity Intervention Within a Pediatric Primary Care
Description

Background: 
Approximately 1 in 5 U.S. school-aged children are obese. There are many known health complications associated with obesity including premature death. Family-based obesity interventions that promote healthy lifestyle habits are effective at enabling children to make changes needed to avoid long-term health complications associated with obesity. The purpose of this evidence-based practice intervention was to evaluate the effectiveness of a family-based obesity intervention on familial lifestyle behaviors related to nutrition, physical activity, and screen time.

Methods:
Two overweight-obese children (according to CDC criteria) ages 8-12 years old visiting a pediatric primary care clinic in a suburban neighborhood located in the southwest region were recruited to participate in this evidence-based practice intervention based on inclusion and exclusion criteria. Familial lifestyle behaviors were assessed using the Family Health Behavior Scale (FHBS) prior to receiving an educational intervention addressing nutritional, physical activity, and screen time recommendations and again after following these recommendation for 6-weeks. Additionally, scheduled follow-up phone calls were made every 3 or 6-weeks addressing any parental questions that surfaced. Data was insufficient for statistical analysis, however, anecdotal recommendations for future implementation of this intervention resulted.

Results:
Of the two patients who participated, pre- and post-intervention data was only attainable from one patient. That patient did have improved scores within each of the 4 FHBS subscales (parent behaviors, physical activity, mealtime routines, and child behaviors). Overall, 11 of the 27 behaviors assessed improved, 12 behaviors resulted in no change, and 4 behaviors worsened. Recommendations related to a more successful implementation of this intervention in the future include improved provider participation (buy-in), utilization of broader inclusion criteria, consideration of the implementation time-frame, and application of the Health Belief Model for addressing existing barriers for each patient prior to implementing the intervention.

Conclusions:
In order to determine the effectiveness of this intervention a larger sample size and completed post-intervention data are needed. The small sample size and lack of post-intervention data inhibits proper data analyzation and significance from being determined.

Date Created
2018-05-02
Contributors
  • Agliano, Courtney (Author)
  • Crawford, Daniel (Thesis advisor)
Topical Subject
  • Obesity
  • Pediatric Obesity
  • Family
  • Lifestyle Intervention
Resource Type
Text
Extent
24 pages
Language
eng
Primary Member of
Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Final Projects
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.50051
Level of coding
intermediate
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Collaborating institutions
College of Nursing and Health Innovation
System Created
  • 2018-07-18 06:22:13
System Modified
  • 2021-06-19 05:48:55
  •     
  • 5 years ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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