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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
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The role of impulsivity in childhood obesity Myutan Kulendran Clinical Research Fellow
Obesity • 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
Tracking of Obesity into adulthood Freedman et al. 2001
The climate change of public health • Failure to act early • No measurable change in right direction • Environmental determinants misunderstood • Window for effective action • Normalisation of Obesity
Obesity Policy Action Framework Process Output Impact Outcome Supportive environment Health Policy Instruments • BEHAVIOUR CHANGE • Reduce energy intake • Increase physical activity Economic • Service delivery • Government spending and taxations • Advocacy • Laws and regulation Strategic policy and leadership Social Environment Health Services Monitoring, Evaluation and Research
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
Behavioural Economic Theory Impulsivity Reinforcement
Setting A muti-dimensional weight management camp for obese children, n=31
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’
Method: Pre-post Study Week 1 Parent and Child Temperament Questionnaire Child Wellbeing Questionnaires On-line parental Impulsivity task C 7 months 8 weeks multi-dimensional intervention 3 month maintenance-phone contact Temporal Discounting Task Go/NoGo Task
Impulsivity Temporal Discounting Task Motor Impulsivity £2 tomorrow OR £20 in 4 weeks
Temporal Discounting Task • Computerised task • 120 hypothetical questions • Mont Carlo Simulation
Outcome Measures Primary Anthropometric measures Child impulsivity scores Child wellbeing scores Secondary Parent impulsivity scores
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
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
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