Abstract

To assess the effects of a home-based, parent-child autotutorial (PCAT) dietary education program on the dietary knowledge, lipid consumption, and plasma low density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) of 4- to 10-year-old children with elevated plasma LDL-C. "At-risk" children (screening total cholesterol, (TC), exceeded 4.55 mmol/L and average LDL-C from two fasting samples was between 2.77 and 4.24 mmol/L for boys or 2.90 and 4.24 mmol/L for girls) were randomized to the PCAT program (N = 88), for dietary counseling with a registered dietitian (N = 86), or to an at-risk control group (N = 87). Dietary knowledge, diet, and LDL-C of these groups were assessed at baseline and after the educational period (3-month follow-up). The knowledge and diet of a not-at-risk (TC below 4.22 and 4.34 mmol/L for boys and girls, respectively) control group (N = 81) was also assessed and compared with that of the at-risk control group. At the 3-month follow-up, the PCAT children's knowledge scores had increased three times more than those of the counseling and at-risk control groups (P < .001). Mean grams of total and saturated fat consumed by PCAT and counseling groups declined while that of the at-risk control group increased slightly; these differences were significant (P < .05). The mean LDL-C decline of the PCAT group was significantly different (P < .05) from the decline of the at-risk control group (0.26 vs 0.09 mmol/L), and approached significance (P = .07) when compared with that of the counseling group (0.26 vs 0.11 mmol/L). The at-risk control group's knowledge and diet did not differ from that of the not-at-risk group. The PCAT program offers a mechanism for providing effective dietary education to children with elevated cholesterol and to their families.

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