Learning to Love Mealtime Together (LiTTLe Me)
Infant Obesity, Parenting, Feeding Behavior
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Infant Obesity focused on measuring Infant Obesity, Parenting, Feeding Behavior, Responsive Feeding
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Parent Inclusion:
- Must be able to read, understand, and speak English or Spanish and be willing to be randomized and participate in data collection.
- Those who are randomized into the experimental group must also be willing to learn ASL specific to communication of hunger, thirst, and fullness.
Infant Inclusion:
- Aged at least 3 months at the time of recruitment
Exclusion Criteria:
Parent Exclusion:
- > 50 years of age
Infant Exclusion:
- Aged more than 9 months at the time of recruitment
- born more than 6 weeks earlier than their estimated due date,
- have any developmental delays or disabilities that make it difficult for them to eat, drink, or communicate,
- attend regular daycare,
- will be younger than 4 months or older than 9 months at the time of the first ASL training.
Sites / Locations
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Responsive Feeding
Routine Care
Intervention families will receive approximately 4 hours of ASL and development specific content related to language and feeding during home visits and phone calls. The initial in-home session with families will focus on teaching ASL signs indicative of hunger, thirst, and satiety. A video and placemat of mealtime signs will be left with families at the completion of the first visit. The remaining sessions, in-home over the next 3 months and by phone monthly thereafter for 6 months total, will focus on reinforcing ASL signing in addition to focused education on particular aspects of language development (receptive language preceding expressive language and increasing intentional communication), feeding development (such as hunger and fullness cues, fear of new foods, the importance of repeated food exposures, variations in intake from meal-to-meal, and the propensity to reject bitter tastes [many vegetables]55], and appropriate portion sizes and variety for healthy growth.
No intervention is provided to the families in this group; however, portions of the intervention lessons will be made available after completion of data collection.