Development of the Intervention Materials for the HomeStyles Obesity Prevention Program for Parents of Preschoolers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Development of Intervention Materials
2.1. Advisory Group
2.2. Theoretical Underpinnings
2.3. Philosophical Basis
2.4. Program Structure
Description and Main Concepts |
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Healthy HomeStylesThis |
This Guide sets the stage for participating in HomeStyles. All families complete this Guide first.
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Family Mealtimes |
This Guide gives parents the secrets to successful family meals. Families do better when they eat together.
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Enjoyable Mealtimes |
This Guide helps parents have calmer, more relaxed family meals. Sharing time together at meals strengthens families.
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Right Sizing Portions |
This Guide helps parents serve food portions that are “just right”—and keep body weights healthy.
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Fuss Free Feeding |
This Guide helps parents teach kids to enjoy new, healthy foods without fussing. The whole family wins when parents use positive feeding practices.
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Taming TV |
This Guide helps parents swap TV-time for active playtime and reduce the effects of TV on kids. People who watch TV more than 2 h a day may have problems.
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Breakfast, the Right Start |
This Guide helps get the whole family off on the right foot every day.
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Best Drinks for Families |
This Guide helps families go for tasty, guilt-free beverages. Having a sugary drink once in a while is fine. Many people drink more than is healthy. Having sugary drinks every day can cause problems for parents and kids.
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Play More, Sit Less |
This Guide helps parents trim screen-time and get more family fun time. Getting more than 2 h of screen-time each day can cause problems. Too much screen-time can harm kids.
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Time to Play |
This Guide helps families play more and have lots more fun together. Many kids and adults do not spend enough time in physical activity—they should get 60 min each day. Families get benefits like these when they are physically active.
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Good night, Sleep right |
This Guide helps families get enough sleep and wake up happy and rested. Many kids and adults do not get enough sleep. Kids who do not get enough sleep may have many problems.
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2.5. Delivery Mode
2.6. Guide Content
2.7. Guide Development Process
Here Is What the Experts Say |
All Guides start with a brief summary of evidence-based research that explains why the Guide’s topic is important to health. |
Kids Copy Their Parents |
This section helps parents remember they are their children’s most important role model. |
Take a Minute |
These sections give parents a chance to think about why the behaviors discussed in the Guide are important to them personally. These sections also provide opportunities to use motivational interviewing techniques to help families make simple changes to build healthier families. |
Here’s What Other Parents are Saying |
This section provides tips and ideas from actual families with preschoolers. It helps parents know they are not alone, and that other families have successfully made changes to improve their kids’ health. |
Even More |
This section provides more tips and ideas specific to the Guide to help parents raise happier, healthier, safer kids. |
Goal Setting |
This section helps parents set small, attainable goals to improve their kids’ health. Parents can set their own goal or choose from the examples other families have set. |
Remember |
This section sums up the Guide. It also reminds families to take small, manageable steps and remember that the changes they are making are important for their family! |
3. Application of Behavior Change and Motivational Interviewing Strategies
Letters in Black Boxes in Figure 2 | Behavior Change Strategy |
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A | Outcome Expectations [91] Beliefs about the likelihood and value placed on the consequences of behavioral choices. |
B | Behavioral Capability [91] Having the necessary knowledge and skills to change a behavior. |
C | Self-efficacy [90,91] Confidence in one’s ability to perform a behavior. |
Supporting Self-efficacy [2] Giving a person the opportunity to express self-confidence. | |
D | Reinforcement [91] Outcomes that give support (or take away support) for performing a behavior. Most commonly positive reinforcement to reward an individual for making a behavior change. |
E | Self-regulation [91] Controlling oneself through self-monitoring, goal-setting, feedback, self-reward, self-instruction, and enlistment of social support |
F | Address Barriers [91,106] Identify real or perceived factors preventing behavior change. Also called Roadblocks. |
G | Observational Learning/Modeling [91] Learning to perform new behaviors by exposure to interpersonal or media displays of them, particularly through peer modeling |
H | Eliciting Change [106] Examines reasons for changing a behavior. |
I | Exploring Importance [106] Examines importance of changing a behavior. |
J | Goal-Setting [90,91,106] Setting goals for changing a behavior (related to Self-regulation). |
K | Rewards [106] Identifies benefits of changing a behavior that are most important to a person. |
L | Relevance [90,106] Examines why changing behavior is important to a person. |
M | Risk [106] Identifies the risks that a person feels are most important to avoid. |
N | Repetition [106] Revisits questions when a person indicates resistance/ambivalence to changing a behavior. |
O | Reflection [106] Asking open-ended questions that give a person an opportunity to think and reflect. |
P | Normalizing [106] Helping a person to understand that personal feelings/experiences/challenges while making change are common and normal. |
Q | Decisional Balance [106] Comparing “good” and “not so good” outcomes about changing a behavior. |
R | Readiness to Change Scale [106] Rating change reading using a 10-point scale where 1 = definitely not ready to change and 10 = definitely ready to change. |
S | Summaries [90] Reminds a person of main aspects of changing behavior made in the current session. |
T | Specifying Target Behaviors [90] Identifying the specific behaviors that need to change. |
U | Self-Monitoring [91,106] Keeping track of specific behavior that is targeted for change each time it occurs. |
V | Stimulus Control [90] Changing and structuring the environment (usually the home) to make it easier to perform a behavior (e.g., eat healthier foods) or avoid performing a behavior (e.g., eating unhealthy foods). |
W | Positive Reinforcement Strategies [90,106] Using praise and recognition of changes that have already occurred to encourage change. |
4. Cognitive Testing Findings
4.1. Home Visitor Content Cognitive Testing
4.2. Parent Content Cognitive Testing
Guide Content Characteristic | Mean ± SD |
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Interest Level | 4.70 ± 0.68 a |
Usefulness | 4.78 ± 0.59 a |
Relevancy | 4.62 ± 0.72 a |
Clarity | 4.66 ± 0.63 a |
Reading Ease | 4.65 ± 0.65 a |
Appeal | 4.50 ± 0.93 a |
Likelihood to Improve Practices | 4.53 ± 0.82 a |
Time Needed to Read | 2.09 ± 0.41 b |
Tone | 2.91 ± 0.30 c |
Knowledge Change after Reading Guide | 2.88 ± 0.32 d |
Importance Placed on Engaging in Practices Described After Reading Guide | 2.90 ± 0.30 d |
4.3. Home Visitor Design Cognitive Testing
4.4. Parent Design Cognitive Testing
5. Comparison of Cognitive Testing Findings with HomeStyles Theoretical Underpinnings and Philosophy
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References and Notes
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Martin-Biggers, J.; Spaccarotella, K.; Delaney, C.; Koenings, M.; Alleman, G.; Hongu, N.; Worobey, J.; Byrd-Bredbenner, C. Development of the Intervention Materials for the HomeStyles Obesity Prevention Program for Parents of Preschoolers. Nutrients 2015, 7, 6628-6669. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7085301
Martin-Biggers J, Spaccarotella K, Delaney C, Koenings M, Alleman G, Hongu N, Worobey J, Byrd-Bredbenner C. Development of the Intervention Materials for the HomeStyles Obesity Prevention Program for Parents of Preschoolers. Nutrients. 2015; 7(8):6628-6669. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7085301
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartin-Biggers, Jennifer, Kim Spaccarotella, Colleen Delaney, Mallory Koenings, Gayle Alleman, Nobuko Hongu, John Worobey, and Carol Byrd-Bredbenner. 2015. "Development of the Intervention Materials for the HomeStyles Obesity Prevention Program for Parents of Preschoolers" Nutrients 7, no. 8: 6628-6669. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu7085301