From the Journals

Early Head Start program boosts healthy eating, self-regulation


 

FROM PEDIATRICS

Home-based preventive interventions not only improve healthy eating habits and self-regulation in toddlers but also guide their parents toward better food presentation and response to picky behaviors, reported Robert L. Nix, PhD, of the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and his associates.

In a small, randomized controlled trial of 73 families with toddlers aged 18-36 months enrolled in home-based Early Head Start (EHS), the researchers evaluated four protective factors, including toddlers’ healthy eating habits, toddlers’ self-regulation, parents’ responsive feeding practices, and parents’ sensitive scaffolding. The study, conducted from April to October 2013, is the first clinical trial of Recipe 4 Success, a preschool-focused intervention created by administrators and home visitors of EHS that promotes healthy eating and self-regulation in toddlers living in poverty who may otherwise face weight challenges and obesity later in life. Integrating the intervention into EHS allowed the researchers to take full advantage of its national infrastructure and to make dissemination more efficient.

Of the families selected to participate, all of whom were living below the Federal poverty threshold, 66 were retained through post treatment. Most participating parents were biological mothers; 61% were single; 29% were not high school graduates; just 11% were employed full time. The toddlers averaged 30.72 months; 44% were female. Roughly 48% of families were non-Hispanic White; 29% were Black; and 23% were Hispanic or Latinx, the investigators reported in Pediatrics. More than three-quarters of participants were enrolled in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

The program allowed parents to transform toddler eating habits quickly

The study, which was designed to evaluate for posttreatment differences in the primary outcomes, involved 10 consecutive weekly lessons implemented by regularly assigned EHS home visitors. Parents were required to adhere to feeding practices carefully targeted with sensitive, structured scaffolding designed to keep toddlers from becoming overwhelmed. Parents were guided to understand, for instance, that toddlers frequently need to be exposed to a new food 10-20 times before eating it, and that poor sleep can have a detrimental influence on emotional and behavioral controls that can progress to weight gain.

Parent recall of what food and drinks their toddlers consumed in the previous 24-hour period was collected by interviewers. The percentage of all meals that included a fruit and/or vegetable, a protein source, and the absence of sweets and junk food were noted. Toddler self-regulation was assessed in accordance with delay of gratification, task orientation, and emotional/behavioral control. Parents were asked to rate toddler ability to cease desired activities to comply with parental requests. Parental responsive feeding practices were also recorded to observe how they introduce unique healthy foods and how they responded to their toddlers’ reactions. Parental sensitive scaffolding was similarly observed for their ability to structure activities in a developmentally appropriate manner promoting self-regulation.

The researchers noted no statistically significant differences between families in the treatment and control groups, nor were there differences in outcome measures or covariates. Study findings showed that, compared with toddlers who continued to receive just EHS support, the toddlers randomly assigned to Recipe 4 Success were more likely to consume snacks and meals that contained fruits, vegetables, protein, and no sweets or junk food.

As the results of this study and others have shown, early food preferences offer the strongest indication of later diet and healthy eating habits throughout life. The program targeted in this study is significant in its ability to accelerate the adoption of better toddler eating habits in just a 10-week period.

Recipe 4 Success along with other successful preventive interventions for young children are most effective when parents drive the change. “In the present trial, the quality of parenting was most highly related to healthy eating habits and self-regulation at baseline,” the researchers noted.

Specifically, the authors attributed the success of the program to “targeting specific interrelated outcomes with an integrated, theoretically driven intervention model,” which allowed Recipe 4 Success to boost the effectiveness of EHS substantially “in just 10 weeks with a minimal increase in funding,” the authors added.

The authors noted several weaknesses as well as strengths of the study. Its primary weakness was a baseline-posttreatment design, which made it impossible to assert that intervention effects can be sustained. The study was also limited to English-speaking families. Given that most home visitors attended to families in both Recipe 4 Success and EHS, the researchers noted the possibility for contamination across conditions, but they added that this would have actually reduced the intervention effects. The study’s primary strength was the evidenced-based nature of the randomized control. That Recipe 4 Success was operated as an intervention only strengthen the benefits of normal EHS visits.

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