Meredith Fraser
July 2009FSU receives Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation grant to study obesity prevention in Latino children
Childhood obesity has become increasingly worrisome for many
American families, and Latino children in particular are more likely
to gain dangerous extra pounds. Curbing this trend in the Latino
population has been the focus of many national studies, one soon to
be based in the Florida State University College of Medicine.
With funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) – a
first for the College of Medicine – Dr. Javier Rosado will run a
two-year, $75,000 project studying the rural Latino population
across Florida. Specifically, he plans to study how well rural
clinics and school health programs inform Latino parents about their
children’s weight.
The study will be based in Immokalee, about 30 miles southeast of
Fort Myers in Collier County, and Quincy. Rosado works as a
postdoctoral psychology fellow at the college’s clinical training
site in Immokalee, which serves a large, predominantly Latino
population of migrant workers.
RWJF created the “Salud America!” program in late 2007 to provide
support for researchers studying the obesity epidemic in Latino
children. Last month, the foundation notified Rosado that his
proposed project had gotten the green light.
Latino kids’ heightened susceptibility to obesity has been
increasingly noted and analyzed over the past decade. According to a
2006 study by the Mathematica Policy Research Group, 25 percent of
Latino children end up obese by age 3, compared with 16 percent of
black children and 14 percent of whites. The disparity among racial
groups remained after researchers accounted for possible confounding
socioeconomic factors.
Rosado and his colleagues will interview parents after children’s
routine medical checkups.
“The long-term goal is to change the policies of these clinics,” he
said. “We think BMI (body-mass index) will be the most helpful tool
to explain children’s weight to families. Hopefully we’ll be able to
show [the clinics] how they can use BMI information to improve their
patients’ care.”
Rosado says the interviewers plan to gather Latino parents’
opinions on:
- Ideal body size and weight differences between males and
females.
- The way the clinic or schools delivered weight-related
information.
- Whether the parents fully understand their child’s health
situation.
- And what parents think they need to combat issues related to
obesity.
In addition to the interviews in Immokalee, Rosado’s study will
gather information from parents of Latino children in Quincy, where
a separate obesity study is under way. After those children receive
BMI screenings at school, their parents receive a letter detailing
the results. Rosado and his colleagues will interview those parents
on the letter’s content and learn what change, if any, they made in
response to the letter’s BMI report. Rosado hopes to shed light on
how parents react to a BMI report and how such information could be
presented most effectively.
Said Myra Hurt, the college’s senior associate dean for research
and graduate programs, “Dr. Rosado’s findings will directly
translate to helping other communities throughout our country.”
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