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Protocol for a randomised trial evaluating a preconception-early childhood telephone-based intervention with tailored e-health resources for women and their partners to optimise growth and development among children in Canada: a Healthy Life Trajectory Initiative (HeLTI Canada)

Authors :
Graeme N. Smith
Rhonda C. Bell
Stephen W. Scherer
Astrid Guttmann
Jon Barrett
Patricia Li
Mark S. Tremblay
Jonathon L Maguire
Cindy-Lee Dennis
Prakesh S. Shah
Sarah Kimmins
Andrea Feller
Peter Jüni
David Millar
Peter Szatmari
Simone N. Vigod
Anick Bérard
Anne Monique Nuyt
Sonia Semenic
Evelyn Constantin
Andrew M. Paterson
Robyn Stremler
Deborah Da Costa
Daniel W. Sellen
K.S. Joseph
Paul Roumeliotis
Jennifer Abbass Dick
Joel G. Ray
Catherine S Birken
Flavia Marini
Kellie E. Murphy
Magdalena Janus
Kevin E. Thorpe
Stephen G. Matthews
Nicole Letourneau
Stephen J. Lye
Howard Berger
Deborah L O'Connor
Dragana Misita
Deanna Telnner
Hillary K Brown
Rulan S. Parekh
Stephanie A. Atkinson
Mark Walker
Martine Puts
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 11, Iss 2 (2021), BMJ Open
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2021.

Abstract

IntroductionThe ‘Developmental Origins of Health and Disease’ hypothesis suggests that a healthy trajectory of growth and development in pregnancy and early childhood is necessary for optimal health, development and lifetime well-being. The purpose of this paper is to present the protocol for a randomised controlled trial evaluating a preconception-early childhood telephone-based intervention with tailored e-health resources for women and their partners to optimise growth and development among children in Canada: a Healthy Life Trajectory Initiative (HeLTI Canada). The primary objective of HeLTI Canada is to determine whether a 4-phase ‘preconception to early childhood’ lifecourse intervention can reduce the rate of child overweight and obesity. Secondary objectives include improved child: (1) growth trajectories; (2) cardiometabolic risk factors; (3) health behaviours, including nutrition, physical activity, sedentary behaviour and sleep; and (4) development and school readiness at age 5 years.Method and analysisA randomised controlled multicentre trial will be conducted in two of Canada’s highly populous provinces—Alberta and Ontario—with 786 nulliparous (15%) and 4444 primiparous (85%) women, their partners and, when possible, the first ‘sibling child.’ The intervention is telephone-based collaborative care delivered by experienced public health nurses trained in healthy conversation skills that includes detailed risk assessments, individualised structured management plans, scheduled follow-up calls, and access to a web-based app with individualised, evidence-based resources. An ‘index child’ conceived after randomisation will be followed until age 5 years and assessed for the primary and secondary outcomes. Pregnancy, infancy (age 2 years) and parental outcomes across time will also be assessed.Ethics and disseminationThe study has received approval from Clinical Trials Ontario (CTO 1776). The findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated to policymakers at local, national and international agencies. Findings will also be shared with study participants and their communities.Trial registration numberISRCTN13308752; Pre-results.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c03c84de37aeb840e0ebf95b2da0080e