Protocol to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an environmental nutrition and physical activity intervention in nurseries (Nutrition and Physical Activity Self Assessment for Child Care - NAP SACC UK): a multicentre cluster randomised controlled trial

Author:

Kipping Ruth1,Pallan Miranda2,Hannam Kim1,Willis Kate1,Dobell Alex2,Metcalfe Chris1,Jago Russell1,Johnson Laura3,Langford Rebecca1,Martin Corby K4,Hollingworth William1,Cochrane Madeleine1,White James5,Blair Pete1,Toumpakari Zoi1,Taylor Jodi1,Ward Dianne6,Moore Laurence7,Reid Tom1,Pardoe Megan1,Wen Liping1,Murphy Marie2,Martin Anne7,Chambers Stephanie7,Simpson Sharon Anne7

Affiliation:

1. University of Bristol

2. University of Birmingham

3. NatCen Social Research

4. Pennington Biomedical Research Center

5. Cardiff University

6. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

7. University of Glasgow

Abstract

Abstract Background One in seven UK children have obesity when starting school, with higher prevalence associated with deprivation. Most pre-school children do not meet UK recommendations for physical activity and nutrition. Formal childcare settings provide opportunities to deliver interventions to improve nutritional quality and physical activity to the majority of 3–4-year-olds. The nutrition and physical activity self-assessment for childcare (NAP SACC) intervention has demonstrated effectiveness in the USA with high acceptability in the UK. The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the NAP SACC UK intervention to increase physical activity, reduce sedentary time and improve nutritional intake. Methods Multi-centre cluster RCT with process and economic evaluation. Participants are children aged 2 years or over, attending UK early years settings (nurseries) for ≥ 12 hours/week or ≥ 15 hours/week during term time and their parents, and staff at participating nurseries. The 12-month intervention involves nursery managers working with a Partner (public health practitioner) to self-assess policies and practices relating to physical activity and nutrition; nursery staff attending one physical activity and one nutrition training workshop and setting goals to be achieved within six months. The Partner provides support and reviews progress. Nursery staff receive a further workshop and new goals are set, with Partner support for a further six months. The comparator is usual practice. Up to 56 nurseries will be stratified by area and randomly allocated to intervention or comparator arm with minimisation of differences in level of deprivation. Primary outcomes: accelerometer-assessed mean total activity time on nursery days and average total energy (kcal) intake per eating occasion of lunch and morning/afternoon snacks consumed within nurseries. Secondary outcomes: accelerometer-assessed mean daily minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and sedentary time per nursery day, total physical activity on nursery days compared to non-nursery days, average serving size of lunch and morning/afternoon snacks in nursery per day, average percentage of core and non-core food in lunch and morning/afternoon snacks, zBMI, proportion of children who are overweight/obese and child quality-of-life. A process evaluation will examine fidelity, acceptability, sustainability and context. An economic evaluation will compare costs and consequences from the perspective of the local government, nursery and parents. Trial registration: ISRCTN33134697

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference57 articles.

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4. Carson V, Lee EY, Hewitt L, Jennings C, Hunter S, Kuzik N et al. Systematic review of the relationships between physical activity and health indicators in the early years (0–4 years) (vol 17, 854, 2017). Bmc Public Health. 2017;17.

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