Reducing Pediatric Overweight: Nurse-Delivered Motivational Interviewing in Primary Care

The purpose of this study was to test the Let's Go 5-2-1-0 program delivered through motivational interviewing by nurses with 4-18-year-old overweight children and parents in primary care (PC). A quasi-experimental design allocated 60 control families to standard clinical care (SCC) and 70 fami...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of pediatric nursing 2013-11, Vol.28 (6), p.536-547
Hauptverfasser: Tucker, Sharon J., Ytterberg, Karen L., Lenoch, Lisa M., Schmit, Tammy L., Mucha, Debra I., Wooten, Judith A., Lohse, Christine M., Austin, Christine M., Mongeon Wahlen, Kari J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The purpose of this study was to test the Let's Go 5-2-1-0 program delivered through motivational interviewing by nurses with 4-18-year-old overweight children and parents in primary care (PC). A quasi-experimental design allocated 60 control families to standard clinical care (SCC) and 70 families to SCC plus the 5-2-1-0 intervention. Drop-out rates were 9 and 35% at 6months and 25 and 41% at 12months, respectively for control and intervention participants. BMI percentile trended (p=.057) toward decline (M change=−3.0 versus −1.5) for intervention children at 6 months (n=52 control, 44 intervention), and nonsignificantly (p=0.14) for both groups (43 control, 40 intervention) at 12months (controls −1.9, intervention −4.6). Intervention effects were found for self-reported daily fruit/vegetable consumption, physical activity, and screen time. Satisfaction was high. Further study of the PC nursing intervention is warranted.
ISSN:0882-5963
1532-8449
DOI:10.1016/j.pedn.2013.02.031