Teaching Healthy Responsive Parenting During Infancy to Promote Vital Growth and dEvelopment (THRIVE) Study
NCT ID: NCT04989738
Last Updated: 2022-08-10
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
65 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-08-05
2021-11-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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This study seeks to pilot deliver an early obesity prevention program in pediatric primary care that has been previously found efficacious when delivered via home visits. Modeled after the principles of the INSIGHT study, (cite) it uses a responsive parenting framework and provides developmentally tailored feeding, sleeping, and soothing guidance to parents of infants. Given its efficacy when delivered during home visits, study investigators aim to examine whether it can be adapted and delivered as part of the prevention work in integrated behavioral health (IBH) primary care practices. Currently, the integrated behavioral health model for prevention work follows the Healthy Steps program. Study investigators aim to compare these two prevention programs to examine if Teaching Healthy Responsive Parenting in Infancy to promote Vital growth and dEvelopment (THRIVE) improves outcomes (i.e., rapid weight gain, soothing, feeding, and sleep) above and beyond seeing a psychologist in a less focused way (Healthy Steps). The intervention will be delivered to 40 families by postdoctoral psychology fellows integrated in a pediatric primary care setting at each infant well-child check (WCC) visit during the first 6 months of life (e.g., 1, 2, 4, 6 mos), while another 40 families will receive care as usual (Healthy Steps) at each WCC during the first 6 months and constitute our control group. The THRIVE program aims to prevent rapid weight gain in infancy, as well as establish healthy eating, sleeping, and self-regulation habits early on in life, by teaching parents responsive parenting principles. More specific portions of the intervention will instruct parents a) to recognize infant hunger and satiety cues and use feeding more selectively in response to hunger only, b) to recognize other reasons for crying or fussy behavior and use alternative soothing strategies when these other reasons apply, c) how to lay the foundation for healthy infant sleep and respond to nighttime awakenings to promote self-soothing, and d) how to introduce complimentary foods at 6 mos, provide repeated exposure to a variety of healthy foods using positive role modeling, and allow infants to determine the amount consumed. In the current study, study investigators have proposed the following aims and hypotheses:
Primary Aims. To develop and pilot an obesity prevention program to be delivered in pediatric primary care at each infant well-child check (WCC) throughout the first 6 months (e.g., 1, 2, 4, 6 mos) and continue to follow families for assessment throughout the first year of life (e.g., follow-up at 9 mos). To evaluate the efficacy/magnitude of effect, feasibility, and acceptability of an individually-tailored, responsive parenting prevention intervention on parent's ability to 1) use alternative strategies to soothe their infant (besides feeding) and to 2) increase their responsive parenting skills, such as attunement, awareness of infant cues (hunger, satiety, sleepy, other fussiness), and responsive feeding from those in the control condition (Healthy Steps).
Primary Aim 1. To evaluate the feasibility of recruitment and retention of mother-infant dyads in primary care and refine assessment procedures to inform the design of an anticipated K23 application.
H1: The intervention format will demonstrate feasibility and acceptability via intervention session attendance and parent report.
Primary Aim 2. To examine if parents' strategies to soothe, feed, and put to sleep their infants differ between those in the intervention arm (THRIVE) compared to the control group (Healthy Steps).
H2a: Parents in the THRIVE group will demonstrate less frequent use of food to soothe infants and a greater use of a variety of other alternative soothing strategies when infant is not hungry.
H2b: Parents in the THRIVE group will report greater attunement, awareness of infant hunger and satiety cues, and responsive feeding.
Exploratory Aim. To examine weight trajectories of infants and estimate effect sizes to detect the relationship between sleep and feeding patterns. Infant anthropometrics will be assessed at ages 1, 2, 4, 6, and 9 mos with growth metrics derived based on US population references.3 H3: Infants in the THRIVE intervention will experience less rapid weight gain compared to infants in the control condition from birth - 9 months.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
SINGLE
Study Groups
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THRIVE Condition
Specifically, parents will learn responsive parenting skills, such as a) recognizing infant hunger and satiety cues and using feeding more selectively in response to hunger only, b) recognizing other reasons for crying or fussy behavior and using alternative soothing strategies when these other reasons apply, c) learning to lay the foundation for healthy infant sleep and respond to nighttime awakenings to promote self-soothing, and d) learning to introduce complimentary foods at 6 months, provide repeated exposure to a variety of healthy foods using positive role modeling, and allow infants to determine the amount consumed.
THRIVE intervention
Parents learn responsive parenting skills, such as a) recognizing infant hunger and satiety cues and using feeding more selectively in response to hunger only, b) recognizing other reasons for crying or fussy behavior and using alternative soothing strategies when these other reasons apply, c) learning to lay the foundation for healthy infant sleep and respond to nighttime awakenings to promote self-soothing, and d) learning to introduce complimentary foods at 6 months, provide repeated exposure to a variety of healthy foods using positive role modeling, and allow infants to determine the amount consumed.
Care As Usual - Healthy Steps Model
Parents learn about development, safety, and positive parenting without a specific emphasis on feeding, sleep, and soothing.
Active Control
Parents learn about development, safety, and positive parenting without a specific emphasis on feeding, sleep, and soothing.
Interventions
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THRIVE intervention
Parents learn responsive parenting skills, such as a) recognizing infant hunger and satiety cues and using feeding more selectively in response to hunger only, b) recognizing other reasons for crying or fussy behavior and using alternative soothing strategies when these other reasons apply, c) learning to lay the foundation for healthy infant sleep and respond to nighttime awakenings to promote self-soothing, and d) learning to introduce complimentary foods at 6 months, provide repeated exposure to a variety of healthy foods using positive role modeling, and allow infants to determine the amount consumed.
Active Control
Parents learn about development, safety, and positive parenting without a specific emphasis on feeding, sleep, and soothing.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* born \> 2500 g
* delivery between 37 and 42 weeks
* English speaking mother
* care provided at one of the CCHMC primary care locations (Hopple Street Health Primary Care Clinic, Pediatric Primary Care, or Fairfield Primary Care).
Exclusion Criteria
* extensive care in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (\>7 days)
* an infant congenital anomaly or neonatal condition that impacts feeding (e.g., cleft lip/palate, metabolic disease)
* plan to move from the Greater Cincinnati area within 1 year.
0 Weeks
4 Weeks
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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Hopple Street Neighborhood Primary Care Clinic
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2020-0599
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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