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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07458009

Theory-Based Parenting Intervention for Preschool Children's Health Behaviors

A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Theory-Based Intervention to Improve Parental Support for Preschool Children's Health Behaviors

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
80 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sun Yat-sen University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this study is to test whether a 4-week online program can help parents better support health behaviors of their preschool children (aged 3-6 years). Preschool children often rely on their parents to build health behaviors, such as being physically active, limiting screen time, drinking fewer sugar-sweetened beverages, and washing their hands regularly. The main questions this study aims to answer are: Does the program improve parents' motivation, planning, and habits related to supporting their children's health behaviors? Do parents who receive the program provide more support for their children? Do preschool children in the program show improvements in health behaviors? Can improvements explained by changes in parents' psychological factors? Researchers will compare parents who receive the program immediately to parents in a waitlist control group. Participants will: Complete online questionnaires before the program, after the program, and one month later (Intervention group only). Complete eight online sessions over four weeks using a mobile program.

Detailed description

Background Early childhood is a critical developmental period for establishing long-term health habits. Preschool children have limited capacity for self-regulation and depend heavily on parental guidance to adopt and maintain health behaviors. Therefore, interventions targeting parents may be particularly effective in promoting child health behaviors during this stage. Previous research has primarily focused on motivational and self-regulatory determinants of parental support behaviors. However, intention-based models often fail to account for automatic processes, such as habit formation, which may contribute to the intention-behavior gap. To address this limitation, the present study integrates motivational, volitional, and automatic processes into a integrated social cognitive framework to better explain parental decision-making in supporting children's health behaviors. Study Objectives and Hypotheses The primary objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of a 4-week theory-based intervention targeting parental psychological determinants and behavioral outcomes. It is hypothesized that: 1. Parents in the intervention group will demonstrate greater improvements in motivational variables (e.g., attitudes, perceived norms, self-efficacy), volitional variables (e.g., action planning, coping planning, action control), and habit compared to the waitlist control group. 2. Parents in the intervention group will report greater increases in supporting behaviors, and their children will show greater improvements in health behaviors compared to the waitlist control group. 3. Changes in motivational, volitional, and automatic variables will mediate the relationship between group assignment and behavioral outcomes. Study Design This study employs a longitudinal two-arm randomized controlled trial design. Participants are randomly assigned to either an intervention group or a waitlist control group. Assessments are conducted at baseline (T1), post-intervention (T2), and one-month follow-up (T3). The intervention group also provides feedback regarding program experience. The intervention targets multiple child health behaviors, including physical activity, screen time, sugar-sweetened beverage consumption, and handwashing. Intervention Overview The intervention consists of eight sessions delivered over four weeks via a mobile program. Each session lasts approximately 20-30 minutes and includes multimedia materials and interactive exercises. Weeks 1-2 focus on motivational processes (attitudes, perceived norms, self-efficacy, and social support). Week 3 focuses on volitional processes (action planning, coping planning, and action control). Week 4 focuses on habit formation, cue-based strategies, and multiple health behaviors. Behavior change techniques include goal setting, action planning, self-monitoring, prompts/cues, modeling, Information about health consequences, social support and reward. Statistical Analysis Plan Intervention effects will be examined using 2 (group) × 3 (time) repeated-measures analyses of variance. Significant interaction effects will be followed by simple effects analyses. To examine mediation, social cognitive variables will be tested as mediators. Group assignment (intervention = 1, control = 0) will serve as the independent variable, and parental support and child health behaviors will serve as dependent variables. Separate mediation analyses will be conducted for each mediator.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALA 4-week theory-based online intervention targeting parental supportThe intervention consists of eight sessions delivered over four weeks via a mobile program. Each session lasts approximately 20-30 minutes and includes multimedia materials and interactive exercises.

Timeline

Start date
2026-02-28
Primary completion
2026-04-28
Completion
2026-04-28
First posted
2026-03-09
Last updated
2026-03-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07458009. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.