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Racial and socioeconomic disparities in the efficacy of a family‐based treatment programme for paediatric obesity
Author(s) -
Davison Genevieve M.,
Fowler Lauren A.,
Ramel Melissa,
Stein Richard I.,
Conlon Rachel P.K.,
Saelens Brian E.,
Welch R. Robinson,
Perri Michael G.,
Epstein Leonard H.,
Wilfley Denise E.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pediatric obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.226
H-Index - 69
eISSN - 2047-6310
pISSN - 2047-6302
DOI - 10.1111/ijpo.12792
Subject(s) - medicine , socioeconomic status , overweight , obesity , demography , social class , percentile , weight loss , family income , household income , gerontology , pediatrics , population , environmental health , statistics , mathematics , archaeology , sociology , political science , law , economics , history , economic growth
Summary Background Family‐based behavioural weight loss treatment (FBT) is an evidence‐based intervention for paediatric overweight/obesity (OV/OB), but little research has examined the relative efficacy of FBT across socioeconomic status (SES), and racial groups. Method A total of 172 youth (7‐11 years; 61.6% female; 70.1% White, 15.7% Black; child percent OV = 64.2 ± 25.2; 14.5% low‐income) completed 4 months of FBT and 8 months of additional intervention (either active social facilitation‐based weight management or an education control condition). Parents reported family income, social status (Barratt simplified measure of social status) and child race at baseline. Household income was dichotomized into < or >50% of the area median family income. Race was classified into White, Black or other/multi‐race. Treatment efficacy was assessed by change in child % OV (BMI % above median BMI for age and sex) and change in child BMI % of 95th percentile (BMI % of the 95th percentile of weight for age and sex). Latent change score models examined differences in weight change between 0 and 4 months, 4 and 12 months and 0 and 12 months by income, social status and race. Results Black children had, on average, less weight loss by 4 months compared to White children. Low‐income was associated with less weight loss at 4 months when assessed independent of race. No differences by race, social status or income were detected from 4 to 12‐months or from 0 to 12 months. Conclusions FBT is effective at producing child weight loss across different SES and racial groups, but more work is needed to understand observed differences in initial efficacy and optimize treatment across all groups.