Want to teach parents about healthy lifestyles for their children? There's going to be an app for that - thanks to researchers in the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry.
Today's technology often gets blamed for contributing to the growing problem of childhood obesity, but these researchers are taking advantage of smart technology for their own ends. They will soon launch a unique pilot study that engages and educates parents via iPads as families wait in the doctor's office.
They're specifically designing an e-survey that focuses on healthy lifestyles for children and also provides immediate feedback and information for parents. It's hoped this use of iPad technology will give health professionals one more tool to tackle the sensitive problem of childhood obesity.
It will be launched at the Edmonton Oliver Primary Care Network and all parents will be asked to participate - not just those with children who are overweight. While parents are waiting for their family doctor or pediatrician to see their child, they'll be asked if they want to take part in the voluntary survey.
If the parents say yes, their child's height and weight would be measured and the parents would use that information to do the survey. Once completed, parents would be given feedback on: how their child's weight and health compares to other children across the country, potential health issues that could be at play for their child, and links to resources in the community. It would then be up to the parents to discuss those results with the doctor.
"I think getting feedback from an iPad is more objective and makes it easier for health professionals to talk about weight and health because it moves the issue beyond just someone's judgment," says Geoff Ball, a researcher with the Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry in the Department of Pediatrics.
"It's an easier segue into the conversation and puts the onus on parents to talk about it and identify healthy weight as a priority. We hope the feedback provides motivation for parents and gives them insight they didn't have before."
Colleen Enns, executive director of the Edmonton Oliver Primary Care Network, says they are excited to play a key role in the research.
"This innovative iPad pilot is the first of its kind in Canada, and is designed to objectively provide evidence- based health information to technologically savvy parents and their children. This information supports the extremely important wellness messages provided by family physicians and pediatricians, and reinforced by the Edmonton Oliver Primary Care Network team of dietitians, nurses, kinesiologists, psychologists, and other interdisciplinary team members who work closely with patients and family physicians."
Following planning and development with families and health professionals over the next year, Ball hopes the tablet survey will be launched next fall.His research team would like to recruit between 100-150 families over the duration of the study. Ultimately, he hopes the survey will engage parents who have children in the gray zone when it comes to healthy weight.
"The really tricky part is reaching out to kids in the gray zone - they are a bit overweight, but not severely obese," says Ball. "We know interventions are more effective with those kids. If we can intervene earlier, before intensive and aggressive therapies are needed, that's a better situation for everyone."
Ball is the principal researcher in this study, which just received $440,000 in funding over three years from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and Alberta Innovates - Health Solutions. Angela Estey, executive director of provincial chronic disease programs, with Alberta Health Services, is the co-principal investigator on the initiative.
Ball is also an adjunct professor with both the School of Public Health and the Faculty of Agriculture, Life & Environmental Sciences.