Abstract

BackgroundChildhood obesity rates in the U.S. have reached epidemic proportions, and an urgent need remains to identify evidence-based strategies for prevention and treatment. Multi-level, multi-component interventions are needed due to the multi-factorial nature of obesity, and its proven links to both the social and built environment. However, there are huge gaps in the literature related to doing these kinds of interventions among low-income, urban, minority groups.MethodsThe B’More Healthy Communities for Kids (BHCK) intervention is a multi-level, multi-component intervention, targeting low-income African American youth ages 10–14 and their families in Baltimore, Maryland. This intervention prevents childhood obesity by working at multiple levels of the food and social environments to increase access to, demand for, and consumption of healthier foods. BHCK works to create systems-level change by partnering with city policy-makers, multiple levels of the food environment (wholesalers, corner stores, carryout restaurants), and the social environment (peers and families). In addition, extensive evaluation will be conducted at each level of the intervention to assess intervention effectiveness via both process and impact measures.DiscussionThis project is novel in multiple ways, including: the inclusion of stakeholders at multiple levels (policy, institutional, and at multiple levels of the food system); that it uses novel computational modeling methodologies to engage policy makers and guide informed decisions of intervention effectiveness; it emphasizes both the built environment (intervening with food sources) and the social environment (intervening with families and peers). The design of the intervention and the evaluation plan of the BHCK project are documented here.Trial registrationNCT02181010 (July 2, 2014).

Highlights

  • Childhood obesity rates in the U.S have reached epidemic proportions, and an urgent need remains to identify evidence-based strategies for prevention and treatment

  • Using agent-based modeling [33], we have developed a virtual representation how low income Baltimore children behave in their food environment, including dietary and physical activity choices

  • To our knowledge, B’More Healthy Communities for Kids (BHCK) will be one of few multi-level, multi-component obesity prevention intervention trials working with urban, low-income, minority youth

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Summary

Methods

The B’More Healthy Communities for Kids (BHCK) intervention is a multi-level, multi-component intervention, targeting low-income African American youth ages 10–14 and their families in Baltimore, Maryland. This intervention prevents childhood obesity by working at multiple levels of the food and social environments to increase access to, demand for, and consumption of healthier foods. BHCK works to create systems-level change by partnering with city policy-makers, multiple levels of the food environment (wholesalers, corner stores, carryout restaurants), and the social environment (peers and families). Extensive evaluation will be conducted at each level of the intervention to assess intervention effectiveness via both process and impact measures

Discussion
Background
Gibson DM
15. Daroszewski EB
26. Bandura A
32. Cotterill R
34. Smith LH
Findings
44. Pottier N
Full Text
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