Objective: Assess effects of an obesity prevention program promoting eating self-regulation and healthy preferences in Hispanic preschool children.
Design: Randomized controlled trial with pretest, posttest, 6- and 12-month assessments. Fourteen waves, each lasting 7 weeks.
Setting: Families recruited from Head Start across 2 sites.
Participants: Two hundred fifty-five families randomized into prevention (n = 136) or control (n = 119).
Intervention: Prevention received curriculum; control received no curriculum.
Main outcome measure(s): Feeding knowledge/practices/styles (parent); body mass index percentile, eating self-regulation, trying new foods, and fruit/vegetable consumption (child).
Analysis: Multilevel analyses for nested data (time points within families; families within waves) and multinomial regression.
Results: Program increased mothers' repeated presentation of new foods (P < 0.05), measured portion sizes (P < 0.05), child involvement in food preparation (P < 0.001), feeding responsiveness (P < 0.001), knowledge of best feeding practices (P < 0.001), and feeding efficacy (P < 0.05); reduced feeding misconceptions (P < 0.01) and uninvolved feeding (P < 0.01). Effects on child eating behavior were minimal. At 12 months, children in the prevention group were less likely to have overweight (P < 0.05) or obesity (P < 0.05).
Conclusions and implications: Program effects emphasize the importance of feeding approaches in reducing childhood obesity.
Keywords: child eating self-regulation; child fruit and vegetable consumption; childhood obesity; family-based; prevention program.
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