4.5 Article

Obesity prevention practices in early care and education settings: an adaptive implementation trial

Journal

IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13012-021-01185-1

Keywords

Implementation science; Early care and education; Childcare; Early intervention; Obesity; Child nutrition sciences

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes for Health (NIH) [NIH NCI R37CA25113]
  2. Translational Research Institute (TRI) through the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the NIH [UL1TR003107]
  3. NIH [R21CA237985, P20GM109096]
  4. Lincoln Health Foundation

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This study aims to determine the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an adaptive implementation strategy for promoting healthy eating habits in early care and education settings. The study also seeks to understand the mechanisms and factors influencing the implementation process. Additionally, a cost-effectiveness analysis will be conducted to evaluate the impact of different implementation strategies on costs and child health outcomes.
Background: Despite the potential for Early Care and Education (ECE) settings to promote healthy habits, a gap exists between current practices and evidence-based practices (EBPs) for obesity prevention in childhood. Methods: We will use an enhanced non-responder trial design to determine the effectiveness and incremental cost-effectiveness of an adaptive implementation strategy for Together, We Inspire Smart Eating (WISE), while examining moderators and mediators of the strategy effect. WISE is a curriculum that aims to increase children's intake of carotenoid-rich fruits and vegetables through four evidence-based practices in the early care and education setting. In this trial, we will randomize sites that do not respond to low-intensity strategies to either (a) continue receiving low-intensity strategies or (b) receive high-intensity strategies. This design will determine the effect of an adaptive implementation strategy that adds high-intensity versus one that continues with low-intensity among non-responder sites. We will also apply explanatory, sequential mixed methods to provide a nuanced understanding of implementation mechanisms, contextual factors, and characteristics of sites that respond to differing intensities of implementation strategies. Finally, we will conduct a cost effectiveness analysis to estimate the incremental effect of augmenting implementation with high-intensity strategies compared to continuing low-intensity strategies on costs, fidelity, and child health outcomes. Discussion: We expect our study to contribute to an evidence base for structuring implementation support in real-world ECE contexts, ultimately providing a guide for applying the adaptive implementation strategy in ECE for WISE scale-up. Our work will also provide data to guide implementation decisions of other interventions in ECE. Finally, we will provide the first estimate of relative value for different implementation strategies in this setting.

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