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Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention

BACKGROUND: Participant engagement with program interventions is vital to support intended behaviour changes and outcomes. The aim of this research was to investigate participant engagement with the Communicating Healthy Beginnings Advice by Telephone (CHAT) program, an early childhood obesity preve...

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Autores principales: Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi, Xu, Huilan, Rissel, Chris, Baur, Louise, Taki, Sarah, Mihrshahi, Seema, Wen, Li Ming
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9108251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35586630
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.868944
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author Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi
Xu, Huilan
Rissel, Chris
Baur, Louise
Taki, Sarah
Mihrshahi, Seema
Wen, Li Ming
author_facet Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi
Xu, Huilan
Rissel, Chris
Baur, Louise
Taki, Sarah
Mihrshahi, Seema
Wen, Li Ming
author_sort Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Participant engagement with program interventions is vital to support intended behaviour changes and outcomes. The aim of this research was to investigate participant engagement with the Communicating Healthy Beginnings Advice by Telephone (CHAT) program, an early childhood obesity prevention program that included interventions for promoting healthy infant feeding practices and obesity-protective behaviours via telephone, and whether engagement with the telephone support program varied by participants’ sociodemographic characteristics. METHODS: This study used de-identified CHAT program data of participants who received the interventions via telephone. Data analysed included 1) participant engagement in telephone support from late pregnancy to 12 months of child's age, 2) demographic characteristics collected at late pregnancy and 3) intervention providers’ observations and notes (qualitative data) for 10 participants from each engagement group (low, medium, high) to explore issues discussed during telephone support. RESULTS: Call completion rate by participants was above sixty percent for all six stages of the telephone support program with more than half of the participants (57%) demonstrating high level of engagement. We found that participants’ country of birth, employment status and annual household income were predictors of engagement with the telephone support provided in the CHAT program. The odds of participants’ engagement with the telephone support program were 1.68 times higher for Australian born (95% CI 1.07 – 2.62), 1.63 times higher for participants who were employed (95% CI 1.01 – 2.66) and 1.63 times higher for participants with annual household income ≥AUD$80,000 (95% CI 1.02 – 2.60). CONCLUSIONS: Participant engagement with the program interventions was good. Participants’ engagement with the telephone support program was significantly associated with certain socio-demographic characteristics. Australian born participants, and participants associated with higher household income and employment engaged significantly more with the telephone support provided in the CHAT program. Additionally, the program engaged more participants older than 30 years of age and those who spoke English at home. The program provided unintended personal benefits to some participants with high engagement level due to their various psychosocial needs such as domestic violence, mental health and sleep related issues. Although not an intended benefit of the intervention, psychosocial needs of participants were met which was a likely factor for mothers’ engagement with the program. This is an important factor that needs to be considered while implementing future programs or scale up of this program.
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spelling pubmed-91082512022-05-17 Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi Xu, Huilan Rissel, Chris Baur, Louise Taki, Sarah Mihrshahi, Seema Wen, Li Ming Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Endocrinology BACKGROUND: Participant engagement with program interventions is vital to support intended behaviour changes and outcomes. The aim of this research was to investigate participant engagement with the Communicating Healthy Beginnings Advice by Telephone (CHAT) program, an early childhood obesity prevention program that included interventions for promoting healthy infant feeding practices and obesity-protective behaviours via telephone, and whether engagement with the telephone support program varied by participants’ sociodemographic characteristics. METHODS: This study used de-identified CHAT program data of participants who received the interventions via telephone. Data analysed included 1) participant engagement in telephone support from late pregnancy to 12 months of child's age, 2) demographic characteristics collected at late pregnancy and 3) intervention providers’ observations and notes (qualitative data) for 10 participants from each engagement group (low, medium, high) to explore issues discussed during telephone support. RESULTS: Call completion rate by participants was above sixty percent for all six stages of the telephone support program with more than half of the participants (57%) demonstrating high level of engagement. We found that participants’ country of birth, employment status and annual household income were predictors of engagement with the telephone support provided in the CHAT program. The odds of participants’ engagement with the telephone support program were 1.68 times higher for Australian born (95% CI 1.07 – 2.62), 1.63 times higher for participants who were employed (95% CI 1.01 – 2.66) and 1.63 times higher for participants with annual household income ≥AUD$80,000 (95% CI 1.02 – 2.60). CONCLUSIONS: Participant engagement with the program interventions was good. Participants’ engagement with the telephone support program was significantly associated with certain socio-demographic characteristics. Australian born participants, and participants associated with higher household income and employment engaged significantly more with the telephone support provided in the CHAT program. Additionally, the program engaged more participants older than 30 years of age and those who spoke English at home. The program provided unintended personal benefits to some participants with high engagement level due to their various psychosocial needs such as domestic violence, mental health and sleep related issues. Although not an intended benefit of the intervention, psychosocial needs of participants were met which was a likely factor for mothers’ engagement with the program. This is an important factor that needs to be considered while implementing future programs or scale up of this program. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9108251/ /pubmed/35586630 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.868944 Text en Copyright © 2022 Ekambareshwar, Xu, Rissel, Baur, Taki, Mihrshahi and Wen https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Endocrinology
Ekambareshwar, Mahalakshmi
Xu, Huilan
Rissel, Chris
Baur, Louise
Taki, Sarah
Mihrshahi, Seema
Wen, Li Ming
Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title_full Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title_fullStr Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title_full_unstemmed Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title_short Participants’ Engagement With Telephone Support Interventions to Promote Healthy Feeding Practices and Obesity-Protective Behaviours for Infant Obesity Prevention
title_sort participants’ engagement with telephone support interventions to promote healthy feeding practices and obesity-protective behaviours for infant obesity prevention
topic Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9108251/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35586630
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.868944
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