4.7 Article

Real-world effectiveness of the Bright Bodies healthy lifestyle intervention for childhood obesity

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OBESITY
卷 31, 期 1, 页码 203-213

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/oby.23627

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This study examined the sustained clinical effectiveness of the Bright Bodies pediatric weight management intervention in a real-world setting and described adaptations to the program. The results indicate that participants experienced improvements in BMI during their participation in the beginner-level program, with variations in adaptation based on sex, season, enrollment period, and starting BMI.
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the extent to which Bright Bodies, a high-intensity, family-based pediatric weight management intervention, improved BMI for participants since publication of the randomized controlled trial establishing efficacy in 2007 and to describe adaptations to the program. MethodsFor participants enrolled from 2008 to 2018, linear mixed-effects models were used to estimate monthly change in BMI expressed as percentage of the 95th percentile (%BMIp95) during participants' first beginner-level program. ResultsThe sample included 396 youth individuals (mean age: 11.7 [SD 2.8] years, 61.6% female, 37.1% non-Hispanic Black, 26.3% Hispanic or Latino, 53.8% with public insurance, 80.1% with severe obesity). Across the 11 years, participants' %BMIp95 reduced on average by 1.63% (95% CI: 1.44%-1.82%) per month during their first program (mean duration: 10 weeks) after adjusting for age, sex, season and year, starting %BMIp95, race and ethnicity, and insurance category. Greater reduction in %BMIp95 was associated with male versus female sex, spring/fall versus winter seasons, enrollment in 2008 to 2018 versus 2015 to 2018, and higher starting %BMIp95 (p value for all <0.001). Adaptations since 2007 included pragmatic changes to increase engagement and address funding shortages. ConclusionsThese results suggest sustained clinical effectiveness of Bright Bodies in the context of real-world adaptations.

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