Cargando…

The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial

BACKGROUND: To prevent childhood obesity and promote healthy development, health authorities recommend that child care programs use the evidence-based practices that foster healthy eating and physical habits in children. Go NAPSACC is an intervention shown to improve use of these recommended practic...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vaughn, Amber E., Studts, Christina R., Powell, Byron J., Ammerman, Alice S., Trogdon, Justin G., Curran, Geoffrey M., Hales, Derek, Willis, Erik, Ward, Dianne S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6896698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31805973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13012-019-0949-4
_version_ 1783476837880430592
author Vaughn, Amber E.
Studts, Christina R.
Powell, Byron J.
Ammerman, Alice S.
Trogdon, Justin G.
Curran, Geoffrey M.
Hales, Derek
Willis, Erik
Ward, Dianne S.
author_facet Vaughn, Amber E.
Studts, Christina R.
Powell, Byron J.
Ammerman, Alice S.
Trogdon, Justin G.
Curran, Geoffrey M.
Hales, Derek
Willis, Erik
Ward, Dianne S.
author_sort Vaughn, Amber E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To prevent childhood obesity and promote healthy development, health authorities recommend that child care programs use the evidence-based practices that foster healthy eating and physical habits in children. Go NAPSACC is an intervention shown to improve use of these recommended practices, but it is known to encounter barriers that limit its impact and widespread use. METHODS: This study will use a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial to compare effectiveness and implementation outcomes achieved from Go NAPSACC delivered with a basic or enhanced implementation approach. Participants will include approximately 25 coaches from Child Care Aware of Kentucky (serving four geographic regions), 97 child care centers with a director and teacher from each and two cross-sectional samples of 485 3–4-year-old children (one recruitment at baseline, another at follow-up). Coaches will be randomly assigned to deliver Go NAPSACC using either the basic or enhanced implementation approach. “Basic Go NAPSACC” represents the traditional way of delivering Go NAPSACC. “Enhanced Go NAPSACC” incorporates preparatory and support activities before and during their Go NAPSACC work, which are guided by the Quality Implementation Framework and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. Data will be collected primarily at baseline and post-intervention, with select measures continuing through 6, 12, and 24 months post-intervention. Guided largely by RE-AIM, outcomes will assess change in centers’ use of evidence-based nutrition and physical activity practices (primary, measured via observation); centers’ adoption, implementation, and maintenance of the Go NAPSACC program (assessed via website use); center directors’, teachers’, and coaches’ perceptions of contextual factors (assessed via self-report surveys); children’s eating and physical activity behaviors at child care (measured via observation and accelerometers); and cost-effectiveness (assessed via logs and expense tracking). The hypotheses anticipate that “Enhanced Go NAPSACC” will have greater effects than “Basic Go NAPSACC.” DISCUSSION: This study incorporates many lessons gleaned from the growing implementation science field, but also offers opportunities to address the field’s research priorities, including applying a systematic method to tailor implementation strategies, examining the processes and mechanisms through which implementation strategies produce their effects, and conducting an economic evaluation of implementation strategies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03938103, Registered April 8, 2019
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6896698
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-68966982019-12-11 The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial Vaughn, Amber E. Studts, Christina R. Powell, Byron J. Ammerman, Alice S. Trogdon, Justin G. Curran, Geoffrey M. Hales, Derek Willis, Erik Ward, Dianne S. Implement Sci Study Protocol BACKGROUND: To prevent childhood obesity and promote healthy development, health authorities recommend that child care programs use the evidence-based practices that foster healthy eating and physical habits in children. Go NAPSACC is an intervention shown to improve use of these recommended practices, but it is known to encounter barriers that limit its impact and widespread use. METHODS: This study will use a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial to compare effectiveness and implementation outcomes achieved from Go NAPSACC delivered with a basic or enhanced implementation approach. Participants will include approximately 25 coaches from Child Care Aware of Kentucky (serving four geographic regions), 97 child care centers with a director and teacher from each and two cross-sectional samples of 485 3–4-year-old children (one recruitment at baseline, another at follow-up). Coaches will be randomly assigned to deliver Go NAPSACC using either the basic or enhanced implementation approach. “Basic Go NAPSACC” represents the traditional way of delivering Go NAPSACC. “Enhanced Go NAPSACC” incorporates preparatory and support activities before and during their Go NAPSACC work, which are guided by the Quality Implementation Framework and the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research. Data will be collected primarily at baseline and post-intervention, with select measures continuing through 6, 12, and 24 months post-intervention. Guided largely by RE-AIM, outcomes will assess change in centers’ use of evidence-based nutrition and physical activity practices (primary, measured via observation); centers’ adoption, implementation, and maintenance of the Go NAPSACC program (assessed via website use); center directors’, teachers’, and coaches’ perceptions of contextual factors (assessed via self-report surveys); children’s eating and physical activity behaviors at child care (measured via observation and accelerometers); and cost-effectiveness (assessed via logs and expense tracking). The hypotheses anticipate that “Enhanced Go NAPSACC” will have greater effects than “Basic Go NAPSACC.” DISCUSSION: This study incorporates many lessons gleaned from the growing implementation science field, but also offers opportunities to address the field’s research priorities, including applying a systematic method to tailor implementation strategies, examining the processes and mechanisms through which implementation strategies produce their effects, and conducting an economic evaluation of implementation strategies. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03938103, Registered April 8, 2019 BioMed Central 2019-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC6896698/ /pubmed/31805973 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13012-019-0949-4 Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Vaughn, Amber E.
Studts, Christina R.
Powell, Byron J.
Ammerman, Alice S.
Trogdon, Justin G.
Curran, Geoffrey M.
Hales, Derek
Willis, Erik
Ward, Dianne S.
The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title_full The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title_fullStr The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title_full_unstemmed The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title_short The impact of basic vs. enhanced Go NAPSACC on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
title_sort impact of basic vs. enhanced go napsacc on child care centers’ healthy eating and physical activity practices: protocol for a type 3 hybrid effectiveness-implementation cluster-randomized trial
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6896698/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31805973
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13012-019-0949-4
work_keys_str_mv AT vaughnambere theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT studtschristinar theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT powellbyronj theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT ammermanalices theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT trogdonjusting theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT currangeoffreym theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT halesderek theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT williserik theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT warddiannes theimpactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT vaughnambere impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT studtschristinar impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT powellbyronj impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT ammermanalices impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT trogdonjusting impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT currangeoffreym impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT halesderek impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT williserik impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial
AT warddiannes impactofbasicvsenhancedgonapsacconchildcarecentershealthyeatingandphysicalactivitypracticesprotocolforatype3hybrideffectivenessimplementationclusterrandomizedtrial