A social media peer group for mothers to prevent obesity from infancy: The Grow2Gether randomized trial Journal Article


Authors: Fiks, A. G.; Gruver, R. S.; Bishop-Gilyard, C. T.; Shults, J.; Virudachalam, S.; Suh, A. W.; Gerdes, M.; Kalra, G. K.; DeRusso, P. A.; Lieberman, A.; Weng, D.; Elovitz, M. A.; Berkowitz, R. I.; Power, T. J.
Article Title: A social media peer group for mothers to prevent obesity from infancy: The Grow2Gether randomized trial
Abstract: Background: Few studies have addressed obesity prevention among low-income families whose infants are at increased obesity risk. We tested a Facebook peer-group intervention for low-income mothers to foster behaviors promoting healthy infant growth. Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, 87 pregnant women (Medicaid insured, BMI ≥25 kg/m2) were randomized to the Grow2Gether intervention or text message appointment reminders. Grow2Gether participants joined a private Facebook group of 9-13 women from 2 months before delivery until infant age 9 months. A psychologist facilitated groups featuring a curriculum of weekly videos addressing feeding, sleep, parenting, and maternal well-being. Feasibility was assessed using the frequency and content of participation, and acceptability using surveys. Maternal beliefs and behaviors and infant growth were assessed at birth, 2, 4, 6, and 9 months. Differences in infant growth between study arms were explored. We conducted intention-to-treat analyses using quasi-least-squares regression. Results: Eighty-eight percent (75/85) of intervention participants (42% (36/85) food insecure, 88% (75/85) black) reported the group was helpful. Participants posted 30 times/group/week on average. At 9 months, the intervention group had significant improvement in feeding behaviors (Infant Feeding Style Questionnaire) compared to the control group (p = 0.01, effect size = 0.45). Intervention group mothers were significantly less likely to pressure infants to finish food and, at age 6 months, give cereal in the bottle. Differences were not observed for other outcomes, including maternal feeding beliefs or infant weight-for-length. Conclusions: A social media peer-group intervention was engaging and significantly impacted certain feeding behaviors in families with infants at high risk of obesity. © 2017, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Keywords: internet; infant; prevention; behavior change; social media; mhealth
Journal Title: Childhood Obesity
Volume: 13
Issue: 5
ISSN: 2153-2168
Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc  
Date Published: 2017-10-01
Start Page: 356
End Page: 368
Language: English
DOI: 10.1089/chi.2017.0042
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC5647509
PUBMED: 28557558
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 2 November 2017 -- Source: Scopus
Altmetric
Citation Impact
BMJ Impact Analytics
MSK Authors
  1. Gurpreet K Kalra
    2 Kalra