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      Interventions commenced by early infancy to prevent childhood obesity—The EPOCH Collaboration: An individual participant data prospective meta‐analysis of four randomized controlled trials

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          Comprehensive Feeding Practices Questionnaire: validation of a new measure of parental feeding practices.

          Measures of parents' feeding practices have focused primarily on parental control of feeding and have not sufficiently measured other potentially important practices. The current study validates a new measure of feeding practices, the Comprehensive Feeding Practices Questionnaire (CFPQ). The first study validated a 9-factor feeding practice scale for mothers and fathers. In the second study, open-ended questions solicited feeding practices from parents to develop a more comprehensive measure of parental feeding. The third study validated an expanded 12-factor feeding practices measure with mothers of children from 2 to 8 years of age. The CFPQ appears to be an adequate tool for measuring the feeding practices of parents of young children. Researchers, clinicians, and health educators might use this measure to better understand how parents feed their children, the factors that contribute to these practices, and the implications of these practices on children's eating behaviors.
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            A parent-focused intervention to reduce infant obesity risk behaviors: a randomized trial.

            To assess the effectiveness of a parent-focused intervention on infants' obesity-risk behaviors and BMI. This cluster randomized controlled trial recruited 542 parents and their infants (mean age 3.8 months at baseline) from 62 first-time parent groups. Parents were offered six 2-hour dietitian-delivered sessions over 15 months focusing on parental knowledge, skills, and social support around infant feeding, diet, physical activity, and television viewing. Control group parents received 6 newsletters on nonobesity-focused themes; all parents received usual care from child health nurses. The primary outcomes of interest were child diet (3 × 24-hour diet recalls), child physical activity (accelerometry), and child TV viewing (parent report). Secondary outcomes included BMI z-scores (measured). Data were collected when children were 4, 9, and 20 months of age. Unadjusted analyses showed that, compared with controls, intervention group children consumed fewer grams of noncore drinks (mean difference = -4.45; 95% confidence interval [CI]: -7.92 to -0.99; P = .01) and were less likely to consume any noncore drinks (odds ratio = 0.48; 95% CI: 0.24 to 0.95; P = .034) midintervention (mean age 9 months). At intervention conclusion (mean age 19.8 months), intervention group children consumed fewer grams of sweet snacks (mean difference = -3.69; 95% CI: -6.41 to -0.96; P = .008) and viewed fewer daily minutes of television (mean difference = -15.97: 95% CI: -25.97 to -5.96; P = .002). There was little statistical evidence of differences in fruit, vegetable, savory snack, or water consumption or in BMI z-scores or physical activity. This intervention resulted in reductions in sweet snack consumption and television viewing in 20-month-old children.
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              Is Open Access

              The Infant Feeding Activity and Nutrition Trial (INFANT) an early intervention to prevent childhood obesity: Cluster-randomised controlled trial

              Background Multiple factors combine to support a compelling case for interventions that target the development of obesity-promoting behaviours (poor diet, low physical activity and high sedentary behaviour) from their inception. These factors include the rapidly increasing prevalence of fatness throughout childhood, the instigation of obesity-promoting behaviours in infancy, and the tracking of these behaviours from childhood through to adolescence and adulthood. The Infant Feeding Activity and Nutrition Trial (INFANT) aims to determine the effectiveness of an early childhood obesity prevention intervention delivered to first-time parents. The intervention, conducted with parents over the infant's first 18 months of life, will use existing social networks (first-time parent's groups) and an anticipatory guidance framework focusing on parenting skills which support the development of positive diet and physical activity behaviours, and reduced sedentary behaviours in infancy. Methods/Design This cluster-randomised controlled trial, with first-time parent groups as the unit of randomisation, will be conducted with a sample of 600 first-time parents and their newborn children who attend the first-time parents' group at Maternal and Child Health Centres. Using a two-stage sampling process, local government areas in Victoria, Australia will be randomly selected at the first stage. At the second stage, a proportional sample of first-time parent groups within selected local government areas will be randomly selected and invited to participate. Informed consent will be obtained and groups will then be randomly allocated to the intervention or control group. Discussion The early years hold promise as a time in which obesity prevention may be most effective. To our knowledge this will be the first randomised trial internationally to demonstrate whether an early health promotion program delivered to first-time parents in their existing social groups promotes healthy eating, physical activity and reduced sedentary behaviours. If proven to be effective, INFANT may protect children from the development of obesity and its associated social and economic costs. Trial registration Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN81847050
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Pediatric Obesity
                Pediatric Obesity
                Wiley
                2047-6302
                2047-6310
                February 06 2020
                February 06 2020
                Affiliations
                [1 ]NHMRC Clinical Trials CentreUniversity of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia
                [2 ]Center Child Health Research, School Exercise Nutrition SciencesQueensland University Technology Brisbane Queensland Australia
                [3 ]School of Public Health, Charles Perkins CentreUniversity of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia
                [4 ]Department of MedicineUniversity of Otago Dunedin New Zealand
                [5 ]Health Promotion Unit, Sydney Local Health District, School of Public HealthUniversity of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia
                [6 ]Institute for Physical Activity and NutritionDeakin University Geelong Victoria Australia
                [7 ]School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and HealthUniversity of Sydney Camperdown New South Wales Australia
                [8 ]Dunedin School of Medicine, Office of the DeanUniversity of Otago Dunedin New Zealand
                [9 ]Nutrition and Dietetics, College of Nursing and Health SciencesFlinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia
                [10 ]Discipline of Child and Adolescent HealthUniversity of Sydney, Clinical School, The Children's Hospital at Westmead Camperdown New South Wales Australia
                Article
                10.1111/ijpo.12618
                32026653
                5685676d-50c1-46d1-969c-44d66a616749
                © 2020

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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