Texas Childhood Obesity Research Demonstration (TX CORD) Project (TXCORDRCT)
Childhood Obesity
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Childhood Obesity focused on measuring child obesity, primary prevention, primary care, weight management, child overweight, BMI
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- 2-12 years of age and
- ≥ 85th percentile for BMI
Exclusion Criteria:
- complications of obesity that would interfere with participation (e.g., severe respiratory insufficiency or orthopedic problems);
- underlying obesity-related conditions, such as systemic steroid use or endocrine abnormalities;
- severe psychological problems; and
- participation in an obesity treatment program within the past year.
Sites / Locations
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
TX CORD Intervention
Brief Clinic Comparison
TX CORD Intervention. The intervention entailed: (1) BMI screening, (2) Next Steps brief counseling materials for the healthcare provider, (3) a 3-month intensive Mind Exercise Nutrition Do It! and Coordinated Approach To Child Health (MEND/CATCH) phase, which included the Mind Exercise Nutrition Do it! ( MEND) programs for preschool (ages 2-5) and school-aged (ages 6-12) children coupled with adapted CATCH activities, and (5) a 9-month transition MEND/CATCH Transition phase, which offered monthly reinforcement sessions for parents and children, and twice weekly Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) sports for children. Community Health Workers (CHWs) serve as program liaisons and assist in delivering all intervention group sessions as well as tracking families. Electronic Health Record (EHR) changes supported the screening and Next Steps delivery.
Next Steps brief clinical intervention. The comparison program was a 12-month clinic-based program conducted at twelve partner healthcare clinics and entailed (1) EHR changes to support childhood obesity clinical visits; (2) BMI screening, (3) Next Steps brief counseling materials for the healthcare provider, and (4) Next Steps self-paced booklet for parents and children to work on nutrition and physical activity targets in a self-directed manner. Families were encouraged to seek repeated clinical visits to address child obesity.