Assessing parental readiness to change their child's lifestyle behaviors can be used as a guide for counseling during well-child appointments. The aim of our study was to determine if parental… Click to show full abstract
Assessing parental readiness to change their child's lifestyle behaviors can be used as a guide for counseling during well-child appointments. The aim of our study was to determine if parental readiness to change pre-visit was associated with plan adherence post-visit in a predominantly low-income population. Parents (n=178) self-identified readiness to change on a Likert scale and subsequently received counseling. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate associations between readiness to change and plan adherence. There was no association between readiness to change and self-reported follow-through with nutrition plans (AOR at 3 months: 1.5 [0.52; 4.18]; p=.5). The ready-to-change group reported higher, albeit non-significant, follow-through with activity plans at three months (AOR 3.6 [0.82; 15.96]; p=.09). Providers should engage all parent/child dyads in behavior modification for nutrition and activity regardless of parents' pre-visit readiness to change.
               
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