Abstract
IntroductionTo reduce obesity-related disparities, reaching economically disadvantaged and/or minority status adolescents to assist them in meeting physical activity (PA) and nutrition recommendations is important. To address the problem, a 16-week intervention called Guys/Girls Opt for Activities for Life (GOAL) was designed. The purpose of this randomised controlled trial is to evaluate any effect of the intervention, compared with a control condition, on improving: (1) adolescents’ % body fat (primary outcome), moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA), diet quality and cardiorespiratory fitness from 0 to 4 months; (2) body mass index (BMI), overweight/obesity percentage and quality of life from 0 to 4 months and to 13 months; and (3) perceived social support, self-efficacy and motivation from 0 to 4 months with evaluation of any mediating effect on adolescent PA and diet quality. An exploratory aim is to evaluate any effect of the intervention, compared with the control, on improving parents’/guardians’ home environment, MVPA and diet quality from 0 to 4 months; and BMI from 0 to 4 months and to 13 months.Methods and analysisAdolescents (fifth to eighth grade) in 14 schools located in underserved urban communities are randomly assigned to the intervention or usual school offerings. One parent per adolescent is enrolled (882 dyads total). Cohort 1 includes four schools (2022–2023). Cohorts 2 and 3 include 5 schools in 2023–2024 and 2024–2025, respectively. The 16-week intervention has three components: (1) after-school GOAL club for adolescents to engage in PA and healthy eating/cooking activities; (2) three parent–adolescent meetings to empower parents to assist adolescents; and (3) GOAL social networking website for parents to share how they helped their adolescent.Ethics and disseminationThe Michigan State University Biomedical Institutional Review Board provided ethical approval for the study. Findings will be shared via the trial registration database, peer-reviewed publications, conferences and community-oriented strategies.Trial registration numberNCT04213014.
Funder
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Reference77 articles.
1. Stierman B , Afful J , Carroll MD , et al . National health and nutrition examination survey 2017–March 2020 pre-pandemic data files. Development of files and prevalence estimates for selected health outcomes. Natl Health Stat Rep 2021. doi:10.15620/cdc:106273
2. Trends in obesity prevalence among children and adolescents aged 2 to 19 years in the US from 2011 to 2020;Hu;JAMA Pediatr,2022
3. Evaluation of obesity trends among US adolescents by socioeconomic status, 1999-2018;Goto;JAMA Pediatr,2022
4. Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, US Department of Health and Human Services . Healthy people 2030: reduce the proportion of children and adolescents with obesity. n.d. Available: https://health.gov/healthypeople/objectives-and-data/browse-objectives/overweight-and-obesity
5. Dietary and physical activity behaviors in 2021 and changes from 2019 to 2021 among high school students - youth risk behavior survey, United States, 2021;Michael;MMWR Suppl,2023