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A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers

Publication ,  Journal Article
Matherne, CE; Zucker, N; Bryant, EJ; Sbrocco, T; Mirza, N; Tanofsky-Kraff, M
Published in: Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology
January 1, 2016

Obesity prevention is a priority for African American (AA) children. However, effective programs are sparse. We therefore conducted a feasibility study of an 8-week group caregiver training program for obesity prevention (GCT-O) targeting parental selfefficacy in family-based lifestyle change. Twenty primary caregivers of overweight and obese (BMI z score M = 2.46, SD = .93), AA preschoolers (M = 4.10 y, SD = 1.48, 70% female) participated in an open-Trial of GCT-O within a community setting serving primarily low-income, AA families. Caregivers completed assessments of parenting and child behavior at baseline and postintervention, and feasibility/ acceptability questionnaires at postintervention. Child height and weight were measured at both time points and at 3-month follow-up. Retention through postintervention was 75%. Average attendance was M = 5.12, SD = 2.12 of 8 sessions. Caregivers reported enjoying the program (100%), and found it helpful (87%) and feasible (79%). Postintervention, caregivers reported less authoritarian (p = .02) and permissive (p = .03) parenting, improved feeding practices (p = .03), and a reduction in youth's lifestyle-related problem behaviors (p = .01). Caregiver report of children's daily caloric intake decreased from baseline to postintervention (p = .04). Parental selfefficacy did not improve postintervention (p = .23). Child BMI z score was unchanged postintervention (p = .70), but decreased significantly by 3-month follow-up (p = .02). GCT-O was feasible and acceptable to program completers. Preliminary results suggest that GCT-O may improve caregiver and child behavior and prevent excess weight gain among AA preschoolers. An adequately powered and controlled efficacy trial is warranted.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology

DOI

EISSN

2169-4834

ISSN

2169-4826

Publication Date

January 1, 2016

Volume

4

Issue

3

Start / End Page

275 / 290
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Matherne, C. E., Zucker, N., Bryant, E. J., Sbrocco, T., Mirza, N., & Tanofsky-Kraff, M. (2016). A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers. Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology, 4(3), 275–290. https://doi.org/10.1037/cpp0000125
Matherne, C. E., N. Zucker, E. J. Bryant, T. Sbrocco, N. Mirza, and M. Tanofsky-Kraff. “A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers.” Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology 4, no. 3 (January 1, 2016): 275–90. https://doi.org/10.1037/cpp0000125.
Matherne CE, Zucker N, Bryant EJ, Sbrocco T, Mirza N, Tanofsky-Kraff M. A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers. Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology. 2016 Jan 1;4(3):275–90.
Matherne, C. E., et al. “A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers.” Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology, vol. 4, no. 3, Jan. 2016, pp. 275–90. Scopus, doi:10.1037/cpp0000125.
Matherne CE, Zucker N, Bryant EJ, Sbrocco T, Mirza N, Tanofsky-Kraff M. A feasibility study of group caregiver training for the prevention of obesity (GCT-O) in African American Preschoolers. Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology. 2016 Jan 1;4(3):275–290.

Published In

Clinical Practice in Pediatric Psychology

DOI

EISSN

2169-4834

ISSN

2169-4826

Publication Date

January 1, 2016

Volume

4

Issue

3

Start / End Page

275 / 290