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Exploring Innovative Approaches and Patient-Centered Outcomes From Positive Outliers in Childhood Obesity

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2014

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Elsevier BV
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Sharifi, Mona, Gareth Marshall, Roberta Goldman, Sheryl L. Rifas-Shiman, Christine M. Horan, Renata Koziol, Richard Marshall, Thomas D. Sequist, and Elsie M. Taveras. 2014. “Exploring Innovative Approaches and Patient-Centered Outcomes From Positive Outliers in Childhood Obesity.” Academic Pediatrics 14 (6) (November): 646–655. doi:10.1016/j.acap.2014.08.001.

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Abstract

Objective New approaches for obesity prevention and management can be gleaned from 'positive outliers', i.e., individuals who have succeeded in changing health behaviors and reducing their body mass index (BMI) in the context of adverse built and social environments. We explored perspectives and strategies of parents of positive outlier children living in high risk neighborhoods. Methods We collected up to five years of height/weight data from the electronic health records of 22,443 Massachusetts children, ages 6-12 years, seen for well-child care. We identified children with any history of BMI ≥95th percentile (n=4007) and generated a BMI z-score slope for each child using a linear mixed effects model. We recruited parents for focus groups from the sub-sample of children with negative slopes who also lived in zip codes where >15% of children were obese. We analyzed focus group transcripts using an immersion/crystallization approach. Results We reached thematic saturation after 5 focus groups with 41 parents. Commonly cited outcomes that mattered most to parents and motivated change were child inactivity, above-average clothing sizes, exercise intolerance, and negative peer interactions; few reported BMI as a motivator. Convergent strategies among positive outlier families were family-level changes, parent modeling, consistency, household rules/limits, and creativity in overcoming resistance. Parents voiced preferences for obesity interventions that include tailored education and support that extend outside clinical settings and are delivered by both health care professionals and successful peers. Conclusions Successful strategies learned from positive outlier families can be generalized and tested to accelerate progress in reducing childhood obesity.

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attitude to health, positive deviance, qualitative, overweight, obesity, parents

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