Publication Date
June 20, 2017
Type
Topics
Geography
Journal Article
Effect of an Internet-Based Program on Weight Loss for Low-Income Postpartum Women A Randomized Clinical Trial
By Phelan S, Hagobian T, Brannen A, Hatley K, Schaffner A, Muñoz-Christian K, Tate D
Abstract
Importance
Postpartum weight retention increases lifetime risk of obesity and related morbidity. Few effective interventions exist for multicultural, low-income women.
Objective
To test whether an internet-based weight loss program in addition to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC program) for low-income postpartum women could produce greater weight loss than the WIC program alone over 12 months.
Design, Setting, and Participants
A 12-month, cluster randomized, assessor-blind, clinical trial enrolling 371 adult postpartum women at 12 clinics in WIC programs from the California central coast between July 2011 and May 2015 with data collection completed in May 2016.
Interventions
Clinics were randomized to the WIC program (standard care group) or the WIC program plus a 12-month primarily internet-based weight loss program (intervention group), including a website with weekly lessons, web diary, instructional videos, computerized feedback, text messages, and monthly face-to-face groups at the WIC clinics.
Main Outcomes and Measures
The primary outcome was weight change over 12 months, based on measurements at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months. Secondary outcomes included proportion returning to preconception weight and changes in physical activity and diet.
Results
Participants included 371 women (mean age, 28.1 years; Hispanic, 81.6%; mean weight above prepregnancy weight, 7.8 kg; mean months post partum, 5.2 months) randomized to the intervention group (n = 174) or standard care group (n = 197); 89.2% of participants completed the study. The intervention group produced greater mean 12-month weight loss compared with the standard care group (3.2 kg in the intervention group vs 0.9 kg in standard care group, P < .001; difference, 2.3 kg (95% CI, 1.1 to 3.5). More participants in the intervention group than the standard care group returned to preconception weight by 12 months (32.8% in the intervention group vs 18.6% in the standard care group, P < .001; difference, 14.2 percentage points [95% CI, 4.7 to 23.5]). The intervention group and standard care group did not significantly differ in 12-month changes in physical activity (mean [95% CI]: −7.8 min/d [−16.1 to 0.4] in the intervention group vs −7.2 min/d [−14.6 to 0.3] in the standard care group; difference, −0.7 min/d [95% CI, −42.0 to 10.6], P = .76), calorie intake (mean [95% CI]: −298 kcal/d [−423 to −174] in the intervention group vs −144 kcal/d [−257 to −32] in the standard care group; difference, −154 kcal/d [−325 to 17], P = .06), or incidences of injury (16 in the intervention group vs 16 in the standard care group) or low breastmilk supply from baseline to month 6 (21 of 61 participants in the intervention group vs 23 of 72 participants in the standard care group) and from month 6 to 12 (13 of 32 participants in the intervention group vs 14 of 37 participants in the standard care group).
Conclusions and Relevance
Among low-income postpartum women, an internet-based weight loss program in addition to the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC program) compared with the WIC program alone resulted in a statistically significant greater weight loss over 12 months. Further research is needed to determine program and cost-effectiveness as part of the WIC program.
Trial Registration clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT01408147
View Resource
Date Added
November 14, 2017
Citation
Phelan S, Hagobian T, Brannen A, Hatley K, Schaffner A, Muñoz-Christian K, Tate D (2017) 'Effect of an Internet-Based Program on Weight Loss for Low-Income Postpartum Women: A Randomized Clinical Trial'. JAMA: Vol. 317, Issue 23, pp. 2381-2391. Available online: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2632504