Kirks 1982a.
Methods |
Study design: cluster‐randomized controlled trial Study grouping: parallel group Study aim: "... to assess the effects of a parent nutrition education program on nutrition education outcomes in young children" (quote) Study period: 1979‐1980 school year Total number of arms: 3 Description of intervention arms: 1. School‐based intervention for children with concurrent parent education (child + caregiver); 2. School‐based intervention for children (child only); 3. No intervention control (not eligible) Number of clusters per arm: 1 Average cluster size: 140.33 children Sample size justification and outcome used: not reported Unit of allocation: school Missing data handling: the number of cases for each outcome differed due to missing data. This suggests that pair‐wise deletion was used rather than list‐wise deletion (i.e. complete case analysis) Reported limitations: 1. Small sample size and non‐random distribution of student ability limits generalizability Randomization ratio and stratification: 1:1:1; effort to match by socioeconomic status, location, quality of teachers and staff, and similarity of resources Participant compensation or incentives: none provided |
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Participants |
Baseline characteristics Child + caregiver arm (intervention group)
Child‐only arm (control group)
Recruitment methods: not reported Inclusion criteria: cluster: not reported; participants: kindergarten, first, second, or third grade students and caregivers Exclusion criteria: not reported Age of participating children at baseline: kindergarten to third grade (estimated to be 4 to 9 years old) Total number randomized by relevant group: total across all study arms: n = 421; child + caregiver arm: n = 176; child‐only arm: n = 140 Baseline imbalances between relevant groups: not reported Total number analyzed by relevant group: dietary outcomes (child + caregiver arm: n = 51; child‐only arm: n = 50) Attrition by relevant group: attrition rates were calculated by dividing the number of children without dietary intake data at the post‐test assessment by the number of participating children in each study arm: child + caregiver arm: 71.0% (125/176); child‐only arm: 64.3% (90/140) Description of sample for baseline characteristics reported above: not reported |
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Interventions |
Intervention characteristics Child + caregiver arm (intervention group)
Child‐only arm (control group)
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Outcomes | The following instruments were used to measure outcomes relevant to this review at baseline, 4 months (end of intervention), and 5 years
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Identification |
Study name: not reported Country: USA Setting: northern California Types of reports: published journal articles Comments: used the following reports: (1) Kirks 1982b, (2) Kirks 1986, as well as unpublished information provided by the study authors (Fischer 2019 [pers comm]) Author's name: Barbara A Kirks Email: not available Conflicts of interest: not reported. However, the study authors noted, "the first author has been the ongoing nutrition consultant for the school district in which our study was done" (quote) Sponsorship source: California State Department of Education |
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Notes | ||
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation | Unclear risk |
Quote: "…three schools were matched and randomly assigned to one of three groups" (Kirks 1986, p 203) Judgement comment: however, the method used to generate the random sequence was not reported |
Allocation concealment | Unclear risk | Judgment comment: methods used to conceal the allocation sequence were not described |
Blinding of participants and personnel All outcomes | Low risk | Judgment comment: no information on blinding of participants and personnel was provided. However, given the nature of the intervention, there would have been no way to blind participants and personnel. Also, the children were aged approximately 4 to 9 years, so their performance was not likely to have been influenced by lack of blinding |
Blinding of outcome assessment All outcomes | Unclear risk | Judgment comment: no information on blinding of outcome assessors was provided. Dietary intake was reported by caregivers, and outcomes may or may not have been influenced by lack of blinding |
Incomplete outcome data All outcomes | High risk | Judgment comment: we calculated attrition rates by dividing the number of children without dietary intake data at the post‐test assessment by the number of participating children in each study arm. Total attrition was 35.9% (151/421) for the study overall and 68.0% (215/316) for the 2 relevant study arms. Differential attrition for the relevant study arms was 6.7% (125/176 vs 90/140). Dietary data were not collected at baseline, and analyses considered only children with data at the post‐test assessment (or, for the follow‐up assessment, only children with data at the 5‐year follow‐up time point) |
Selective reporting | High risk | Judgment comment: the trial was not registered and no protocol was cited that could be retrieved. Fruit intake, vegetable intake, dietary diversity, and dietary quality outcomes were reported incompletely and could not be entered into the meta‐analysis. We could not retrieve relevant data from the study authors |
Recruitment bias | Unclear risk | Judgment comment: it is unclear whether participants were recruited before or after randomization |
Baseline imbalance | High risk | Judgment comment: study authors did not report on similarities and differences between intervention arms. However, the study authors noted that one of the classes involved in the study was "exceptional" (quote; Kirks 1982b, p 139), and it would have been better if the treatment groups were truly matched |
Loss of clusters | Low risk | Judgment comment: this is not relevant because there was only 1 cluster per arm |
Incorrect analysis | High risk | Judgment comment: study authors did not report adjusting for clustering in the analysis and did not report intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) |
Comparability with individually randomized trials | Unclear risk | Judgment comment: information was insufficient to permit judgment |
Other sources of bias | High risk | Judgment comment: only 1 cluster was reported per intervention arm |