期刊论文详细信息
BMC Public Health
Butterfly Girls; promoting healthy diet and physical activity to young African American girls online: rationale and design
Richard Buday2  Celeste Walker3  Yan Liu1  Tom Baranowski1  Karen Cullen1  Chishinga Callender1  Isabel Vazquez1  Dora Cantu1  Cynthia Boutte1  Riddhi Bhatt4  Rory Mahabir1  Debbe Thompson1 
[1] USDA/ARS Children’s Nutrition Research Center, Baylor College of Medicine, 1100 Bates Street, Houston TX 77030, USA;Archimage, 4203 Montrose Boulevard., Suite 390, Houston, TX 77004, USA;Playwright, Houston, TX, USA;Department of Family and Community Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, 3701 Kirby Dr., Suite 600, Houston TX 77098, USA
关键词: Culture;    Diet;    African American;    Child;    Physical activity;    Obesity prevention;    Intervention;    Internet;   
Others  :  1161973
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-2458-13-709
 received in 2013-05-18, accepted in 2013-05-22,  发布年份 2013
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

Young African American girls have a high risk of obesity. Online behavior change programs promoting healthy diet and physical activity are convenient and may be effective for reducing disparities related to obesity. This report presents the protocol guiding the design and evaluation of a culturally and developmental appropriate online obesity prevention program for young African American girls.

Methods/Design

The Butterfly Girls and the Quest for Founder’s Rock is an 8-episode online program delivered as an animated, interactive comic. The program promotes healthy diet and physical activity and is specifically designed for 8–10 year old African American girls. Girls, parents, and community representatives provided formative feedback on cultural relevance and developmental appropriateness. A three-group (treatment, comparison, wait-list control) randomized design (n = 390 parent/child dyads) is employed, with child as the unit of assignment. Change in body mass index is the primary outcome; change in fruit and vegetable consumption, water, and physical activity are secondary outcomes. Data collection occurs at baseline, approximately 3 months after baseline (i.e., completion of the online program), and approximately three months later (i.e., maintenance assessment). Two dietary recalls are collected at each data collection period by trained interviewers using the Nutrient Data System for Research (NDSR 2012) system. Physical activity is objectively measured by seven days of accelerometry. Psychosocial and process data are also collected. Girls in the treatment and comparison groups will be interviewed at post 1 to obtain information on personal reactions to the program.

Discussion

This research will develop and evaluate the efficacy of an online program for reducing obesity risk among girls at risk of obesity and related diseases. Online programs offer the potential for wide dissemination, thus reducing disparities related to obesity.

Trial Registration

NCT01481948

【 授权许可】

   
2013 Thompson et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
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