TY - JOUR PY - 2019// TI - Increasing awareness of food-choking and nutrition in children through education of caregivers: the CHOP community intervention trial study protocol JO - BMC public health A1 - Lorenzoni, Giulia A1 - Azzolina, Danila A1 - Baldas, Solidea A1 - Messi, Gianni A1 - Lanera, Corrado A1 - French, Megan A. A1 - Da Dalt, Liviana A1 - Gregori, Dario SP - e1156 EP - e1156 VL - 19 IS - 1 N2 - BACKGROUND: Choking is one of the leading causes of death among unintentional injuries in young children. Food choking represents a considerable public health burden, which might be reduced through increased effective preventative education programs. We present a protocol for a community intervention trial termed CHOP (CHOking Prevention project) that aimed to teach Italian families how to prevent food choking injuries and increase knowledge relating to nutrition.

METHODS: Italian educational facilities were enrolled. Stratified randomization blocked by geographical area was performed. Each stratum was randomized to one of three different intervention strategies or to a control group. Educational intervention was delivered in the schools by experts and certified trainers as per the following three intervention strategies: directly to families (Strategy A); to teaching staff only, who subsequently delivered the same educational intervention to families (Strategy B); to health service staff only, who then delivered the educational intervention to teaching staff, who subsequently delivered the intervention to families (Strategy C). Participants completed a questionnaire about their knowledge on the topics presented during the educational interventions (pre-, post-, and follow-up of intervention). Information from the questionnaires was synthetized into 6 indicators in order to measure how effective each intervention strategy was.

DISCUSSION: The issue of food choking injuries in children is relevant to public health. The protocol we present provides an opportunity to progress towards overcoming such challenges through a working model that can be implemented also in other countries. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03218618. The study was registered on 14 July 2017.

Language: en

LA - en SN - 1471-2458 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7469-7 ID - ref1 ER -