The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity

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The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity Myutan Kulendran Clinical Research Fellow

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The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity. Myutan Kulendran Clinical Research Fellow. Obesity. 57 th World Health Assembly (2004) Prevention and control of non-communicable diseases (NCD) NCD and social and economic inequalities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity

Page 1: The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity

The role of impulsivity in

childhood obesity

Myutan KulendranClinical Research Fellow

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• 57th World Health Assembly (2004)

• Prevention and control of non-communicable diseases (NCD)

• NCD and social and economic inequalities

• Obesity is a major risk factor for morbidity and mortality internationally

Obesity

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Health Consequences

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Global rise in childhood obesity

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Tracking of Obesity into adulthood

Freedman et al. 2001

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Food advertising on and prevelence of overweight

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Obesity Network

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• Failure to act early

• No measurable change in right direction

• Environmental determinants misunderstood

• Window for effective action

• Normalisation of Obesity

The climate change of public health

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Opportunities for intervention: Life course

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Process Output Impact Outcome

Strategic policy and leadership

Policy Instruments• Service

delivery• Government

spending and taxations

• Advocacy• Laws and

regulation

BEHAVIOUR CHANGE

•Reduce energy intake•Increase physical activity

Supportive environment HealthHealth

EconomicEconomic

SocialSocial

EnvironmentEnvironment

Health Services

Monitoring, Evaluation and Research

Obesity Policy Action Framework

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Fleurbaix Laventie Ville Sante Study

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• Mindspace report published in March 2010

• Provides the operating framework for applying behavioural insight to public policy

• Behavioural Insights Team established in the Cabinet Office Strategy Unit

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ImpulsivityBehavioural Economic Theory

Reinforcement

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Setting

A muti-dimensional weight management camp for obese children, n=31

Boys Girls

n=12 n=19

6/12 funded by PCT 15/19 funded by PCT

14 years (12-17 years) 13 years (12-17 years)

5 weeks (3-8 weeks) 5 weeks (3-8 weeks)

102 kg (85kg-154 kg) 88 kg (55kg-111kg)

BMI 34 (26-43) BMI 33 (21-39)

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Hypothesis‘Do obese children lose significant weight during

a multi-dimensional lifestlye intervention summer camp’

‘Does impulsivity predict weight loss maintenance after the camp setting’

‘Are children happier after losing weight in a

camp setting’

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Method: Pre-post Study

8 weeks multi-dimensional intervention

3 month maintenance-phone contact

7 months

Week 1

1.Parent and Child Temperament Questionnaire2.Child Wellbeing Questionnaires3.On-line parental Impulsivity task

4. Temporal Discounting Task

5. Go/NoGo Task

C

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ImpulsivityTemporal Discounting Task Motor Impulsivity

£2 tomorrow OR £20 in 4 weeks

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Temporal Discounting Task

• Computerised task

• 120 hypothetical questions

• Mont Carlo Simulation

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Outcome Measures

PrimaryAnthropometric measures

Child impulsivity scores Child wellbeing scores

SecondaryParent impulsivity scores

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Reduction in Motor Impulsivity Post Camp

p>0.05

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Significant findings…..

• Change in motor impulsivity significant– Control for age and duration of stay

• Longer duration of stay associated with greater reduction in impulsivity

• Older show an attenuation in the reduction of impulsivity scores

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Wellbeing Improved Post CampDomains (Pre-

Post)Sig.(2-tailed)

ONS 0.658

School 0.045

Eating 0.097

Sport 0.214

Health 0.006

Looks 0.002

Time 0.033

Domains (Pre-Post

Sig.(2-tailed)

Family 0.949

Home 0.818

School 0.185

Local Area 0.432

Choices 0.081

Safety 0.201

Total 0.007

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Conclusions

• Key role of impulsivity in obesity– Development– Maintenance

• Screening using personality traits• Development of behavioural interventions

– Effective in similar regulating environments

• Children are happier with weight loss

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Further Work

• SMS study during maintenance phase of camp• Commitments vs Information

• Continue to monitor impulsivity and Wellbeing in a community based family intervention

• Use of pervasive technology to monitor physical activity

• Feedback and Social Norms