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A Randomized Trial of the Effects of Reducing Television Viewing and Computer Use on Body Mass Index in Young Children
Leonard H. Epstein, PhD;
James N. Roemmich, PhD;
Jodie L. Robinson, MA, MBA;
Rocco A. Paluch, MA;
Dana D. Winiewicz;
Janene H. Fuerch;
Thomas N. Robinson, MD, MPH
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2008;162(3):239-245.
Objective To assess the effects of reducing television viewing and computer use on children's body mass index (BMI) as a risk factor for the development of overweight in young children.
Design Randomized controlled clinical trial.
Setting University children's hospital.
Participants Seventy children aged 4 to 7 years whose BMI was at or above the 75th BMI percentile for age and sex.
Interventions Children were randomized to an intervention to reduce their television viewing and computer use by 50% vs a monitoring control group that did not reduce television viewing or computer use.
Main Outcome Measures Age- and sex-standardized BMI (zBMI), television viewing, energy intake, and physical activity were monitored every 6 months during 2 years.
Results Children randomized to the intervention group showed greater reductions in targeted sedentary behavior (P < .001), zBMI (P < .05), and energy intake (P < .05) compared with the monitoring control group. Socioeconomic status moderated zBMI change (P = .01), with the experimental intervention working better among families of low socioeconomic status. Changes in targeted sedentary behavior mediated changes in zBMI (P < .05). The change in television viewing was related to the change in energy intake (P < .001) but not to the change in physical activity (P =.37).
Conclusions Reducing television viewing and computer use may have an important role in preventing obesity and in lowering BMI in young children, and these changes may be related more to changes in energy intake than to changes in physical activity.
Trial Registration clinical trials.gov Identifier: NCT00065052
Author Affiliations: Behavioral Medicine Laboratory, Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, State University of New York at Buffalo (Drs Epstein and Roemmich, Mr Paluch, and Mss Robinson, Winiewicz, and Fuerch); and Division of General Pediatrics and Stanford Prevention Research Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California (Dr Robinson).
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