Protocol for a randomised trial evaluating a preconception-early childhood telephone-based intervention with tailored e-health resources for women and their partners to optimise growth and development among children in Canada: a Healthy Life Trajectory Initiative (HeLTI Canada) Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • IntroductionThe ‘Developmental Origins of Health and Disease’ hypothesis suggests that a healthy trajectory of growth and development in pregnancy and early childhood is necessary for optimal health, development and lifetime well-being. The purpose of this paper is to present the protocol for a randomised controlled trial evaluating a preconception-early childhood telephone-based intervention with tailored e-health resources for women and their partners to optimise growth and development among children in Canada: a Healthy Life Trajectory Initiative (HeLTI Canada). The primary objective of HeLTI Canada is to determine whether a 4-phase ‘preconception to early childhood’ lifecourse intervention can reduce the rate of child overweight and obesity. Secondary objectives include improved child: (1) growth trajectories; (2) cardiometabolic risk factors; (3) health behaviours, including nutrition, physical activity, sedentary behaviour and sleep; and (4) development and school readiness at age 5 years.Method and analysisA randomised controlled multicentre trial will be conducted in two of Canada’s highly populous provinces—Alberta and Ontario—with 786 nulliparous (15%) and 4444 primiparous (85%) women, their partners and, when possible, the first ‘sibling child.’ The intervention is telephone-based collaborative care delivered by experienced public health nurses trained in healthy conversation skills that includes detailed risk assessments, individualised structured management plans, scheduled follow-up calls, and access to a web-based app with individualised, evidence-based resources. An ‘index child’ conceived after randomisation will be followed until age 5 years and assessed for the primary and secondary outcomes. Pregnancy, infancy (age 2 years) and parental outcomes across time will also be assessed.Ethics and disseminationThe study has received approval from Clinical Trials Ontario (CTO 1776). The findings will be published in peer-reviewed journals and disseminated to policymakers at local, national and international agencies. Findings will also be shared with study participants and their communities.Trial registration numberISRCTN13308752; Pre-results.

authors

  • Dennis, Cindy-Lee
  • Marini, Flavia
  • Dick, Jennifer Abbass
  • Atkinson, Stephanie
  • Barrett, Jon
  • Bell, Rhonda
  • Berard, Anick
  • Berger, Howard
  • Brown, Hillary K
  • Constantin, Evelyn
  • Da Costa, Deborah
  • Feller, Andrea
  • Guttmann, Astrid
  • Janus, Magdalena
  • Joseph, KS
  • Jüni, Peter
  • Kimmins, Sarah
  • Letourneau, Nicole
  • Li, Patricia
  • Lye, Stephen
  • Maguire, Jonathon L
  • Matthews, Stephen G
  • Millar, David
  • Misita, Dragana
  • Murphy, Kellie
  • Nuyt, Anne Monique
  • O'Connor, Deborah L
  • Parekh, Rulan Savita
  • Paterson, Andrew
  • Puts, Martine
  • Ray, Joel
  • Roumeliotis, Paul
  • Scherer, Stephen
  • Sellen, Daniel
  • Semenic, Sonia
  • Shah, Prakesh S
  • Smith, Graeme N
  • Stremler, Robyn
  • Szatmari, Peter
  • Telnner, Deanna
  • Thorpe, Kevin
  • Tremblay, Mark S
  • Vigod, Simone
  • Walker, Mark
  • Birken, Catherine

publication date

  • February 2021