posted on 2020-11-11, 15:02authored byKaren Matvienko-Sikar, Elaine C. Toomey, Michelle Queally, Caragh Flannery, Kate O'Neill, Ted G. Dinan, Edel Doherty, Janas M. Harrington, Catherine B. Hayes, Caroline Heary, Marita Hennessy, Colette Kelly, Sheena M. McHugh, Jenny McSharry, Catherine Stanton, Tony Heffernan, Molly Byrne, Patricia M. Kearney
Introduction Childhood obesity is a public health
challenge. There is evidence for associations between
parents’ feeding behaviours and childhood obesity
risk. Primary care provides a unique opportunity for
delivery of infant feeding interventions for childhood
obesity prevention. Implementation strategies are
needed to support infant feeding intervention delivery.
The Choosing Healthy Eating for Infant Health (CHErIsH)
intervention is a complex infant feeding intervention
delivered at infant vaccination visits, alongside a
healthcare professional (HCP)-level implementation
strategy to support delivery.
Methods and analysis This protocol provides a
description of a non-randomised feasibility study of an
infant feeding intervention and implementation strategy,
with an embedded process evaluation and economic
evaluation. Intervention participants will be parents
of infants aged ≤6 weeks at recruitment, attending
a participating HCP in a primary care practice. The
intervention will be delivered at the infant’s 2, 4, 6, 12
and 13month vaccination visits and involves brief verbal
infant feeding messages and additional resources,
including a leaflet, magnet, infant bib and sign-posting
to an information website. The implementation strategy
encompasses a local opinion leader, HCP training delivered
prior to intervention delivery, electronic delivery prompts
and additional resources, including a training manual,
poster and support from the research team. An embedded
mixed-methods process evaluation will examine the
acceptability and feasibility of the intervention, the
implementation strategy and study processes including
data collection. Qualitative interviews will explore parent
and HCP experiences and perspectives of delivery
and receipt of the intervention and implementation
strategy. Self-report surveys will examine fidelity of
delivery and receipt, and acceptability, suitability and
comprehensiveness of the intervention, implementation
strategy and study processes. Data from electronic
delivery prompts will also be collected to examine
implementation of the intervention. A cost–outcome
description will be conducted to measure costs of the
intervention and the implementation strategy.
Ethics and dissemination This study received approval
from the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the Cork Teaching Hospitals. Study findings will be disseminated via
peer-reviewed publications and conference presentations.
Funding
Development of a structure identification methodology for nonlinear dynamic systems