An early feeding practices intervention for obesity prevention
Journal article
Daniels, Lynde Allison, Mallan, Kimberley Margaret, Nicholson, Jan Maree, Thorpe, Karen, Nambiar, Smita, Mauch, Chelsea Emma and Magarey, Anthea. (2011). An early feeding practices intervention for obesity prevention. Pediatrics. 136(1), pp. e40 - e49. https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2014-4108
Authors | Daniels, Lynde Allison, Mallan, Kimberley Margaret, Nicholson, Jan Maree, Thorpe, Karen, Nambiar, Smita, Mauch, Chelsea Emma and Magarey, Anthea |
---|---|
Abstract | OBJECTIVE: Report long-term outcomes of the NOURISH randomized controlled trial (RCT), which evaluated a universal intervention commencing in infancy to provide anticipatory guidance to first-time mothers on “protective” complementary feeding practices that were hypothesized to reduce childhood obesity risk. METHODS: The NOURISH RCT enrolled 698 mothers (mean age 30.1 years, SD = 5.3) with healthy term infants (51% female). Mothers were randomly allocated to usual care or to attend two 6-session, 12-week group education modules. Outcomes were assessed 5 times: baseline (infants 4.3 months); 6 months after module 1 (infants 14 months); 6 months after module 2 (infants 2 years) and at 3.5 and 5 years of age. Maternal feeding practices were self-reported using validated questionnaires. BMI Z-score was calculated from measured child height and weight. Linear mixed models evaluated intervention (group) effect across time. RESULTS: Retention at age 5 years was 61%. Across ages 2 to 5 years, intervention mothers reported less frequent use of nonresponsive feeding practices on 6 of 9 scales. At 5 years, they also reported more appropriate responses to food refusal on 7 of 12 items (Ps ≤ .05). No statistically significant group effect was noted for anthropometric outcomes (BMI Z-score: P = .06) or the prevalence of overweight/obesity (control 13.3% vs intervention 11.4%, P = .66). CONCLUSIONS: Anticipatory guidance on complementary feeding resulted in first-time mothers reporting increased use of protective feeding practices. These intervention effects were sustained up to 5 years of age and were paralleled by a nonsignificant trend for lower child BMI Z-scores at all postintervention assessment points. |
Year | 2011 |
Journal | Pediatrics |
Journal citation | 136 (1), pp. e40 - e49 |
ISSN | 1606-6359 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2014-4108 |
Scopus EID | 2-s2.0-84934342798 |
Open access | Open access |
Page range | e40 - e49 |
Publisher's version | |
Grant ID | nhmrc/426704 |
https://acuresearchbank.acu.edu.au/item/88045/an-early-feeding-practices-intervention-for-obesity-prevention
Download files
134
total views714
total downloads0
views this month0
downloads this month