Development of the DRIVE Curriculum to Address Childhood Obesity Risk Factors
Pediatric Obesity
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Pediatric Obesity focused on measuring children, pediatric obesity, parent training, home-based, nutrition, physical activity, parent-child interaction, parenting
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Child age 2-6 years old with a BMI percentile greater than or equal to 75
- Fluent in English
- Parent has primary custody of the primary child participant in the study
Exclusion Criteria:
- Pregnant or currently breastfeeding (parent)
- Planning to get pregnant while enrolled in the study (parent)
- Have BMI greater than 45 (parent)
- Chronic disease that affects body weight, appetite, or metabolism (for example, diabetes- type I or type II) (child)
- Have HIV or AIDS (child)
- Use prescription or over-the-counter medications or herbal products that affect appetite, body weight, or metabolism (child)
- Plan to move out of the Atlanta/Baton Rouge area for the duration of enrollment (approximately 5 months) (family)
- Plan to be out of the Atlanta/Baton Rouge area for more than 2 weeks for the duration of enrollment (approximately 5 months) (family)
Sites / Locations
- Georgia State University
- Pennington Medical Center
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
DRIVE program
Control Group
Participants in the experimental group will receive the DRIVE curriculum (15 sessions) via weekly sessions conducted in their home by a DRIVE provider.
The parents in the control group will be mailed information on nutrition, physical activity, and parent-child interactions. Information on nutrition will include guidelines provided by the "MyPlate" website (http://www.choosemyplate.gov/preschoolers.html) in addition to information on proper nutrition and suggest levels of physical activity for preschoolers. Lastly, parents will be provided with the free publication, "Adventures in Parenting: How responding, Preventing, Monitoring, Mentoring, and Modeling Can Help You Be A Successful Parent," authored by National Institutes of Health, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Information covered in this document includes effective parenting strategies for children at specific ages.