Abstract

Background: Parent participation in children’s health interventions is insufciently defned and measured. This project quantifed parent participation to enable future examination with outcomes in an intervention focused on 4th graders, aged 9–11 years, and their families living in northern Colorado.

Methods: Indices were developed to measure type (Parent Participation Profle; PPP) and intensity (Parent Engage‑ ment Intensity; PEI) of engagement in Fuel for Fun (FFF), an asymmetric school-and family-based intervention for 4th graders. Study arm-specifc participation opportunities were catalogued and summed to calculate the PPP. An algo‑ rithm considered frequency, efort, convenience, and invasiveness of each activity to calculate PEI. Indices were stand‑ ardized (0–100%) using study arm-specifc divisors to address asymmetric engagement opportunities. Parents who completed ≥75% of the PPP were defned as Positive Deviants. Youth height and weight were measured. Youth BMI percentile change was compared with parent Positive Deviant status using general linear modeling with repeated measures that included the participation indices.

Results: Of 1435 youth, 777 (54%) had parent participation in at least one activity. Standardized means were 41.5±25.4% for PPP and 27.6±20.9% for PEI. Demographics, behaviors or baseline FFF outcomes did not difer between the Positive Deviant parent (n=105) and non-Positive Deviant parents (n=672); but more Positive Deviant parents followed an indulgent feeding style (p =0.015). Standardized intensity was greater for Positive Deviant par‑ ents; 66.9±20.6% vs 21.5±12.7% (p <0.001) and diferences with non-Positive Deviant parents were related to activ‑ ity type (p ≤0.01 for six of eight activities). Standardized participation intensity was associated with engagement in a greater number of standardized activity types. Among participating parents, standardized intensity and breadth of activity were inversely related to the youth BMI percentile (n=739; PEI r=−0.39, p < 0.001; PPP r=−0.34, p < 0.001). Parent engagement was not associated with parent BMI change.

Conclusions: An activity-specific intensity schema operationalized measurement of parent engagement in a com‑ plex, unbalanced research design and can serve as a template for more sensitive assessment of parent engagement. Positive deviance in parent engagement was not a function of personal, but rather activity characteristics. PPP and

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Publication Date

10-9-2021

Document Type

Article

Department, Program, or Center

Wegmans School of Health and Nutrition (CHST)

Campus

RIT – Main Campus

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