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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jul 14.
Published in final edited form as: Br J Nutr. 2020 Sep 30;126(1):81–91. doi: 10.1017/S0007114520003852

Table 3.

Associations between cluster membership and BMI and percentage of the 95th BMI percentile for each COPTR study

Prevention studies, β (95% CI)
Treatment studies, β (95% CI)
NET-Works (n=527) GROW (n=604) GOALS (n=240) IMPACT (n=341)
BMI
 Healthy Ref. Ref. Ref. -
 Unhealthy −0.24 (−0.55, 0.07) −0.11 (−0.29, 0.06) - -
 Dairy/SSB - −0.01 (−0.15, 0.14) - -
 Semi-Traditional - - −0.37 (−1.34, 0.61) -
 Mixed - - - Ref.
 Sandwich - - - 0.99 (0.01, 1.97)*
%95th BMI percentile
 Healthy Ref. Ref. Ref. -
 Unhealthy −1.39 (−3.11, 0.33) −0.64 (−1.62, 0.34) - -
 Dairy/SSB - −0.08 (−0.89, 0.73) - -
 Semi-Traditional - - −1.57 (−6.01, 2.87) -
 Mixed - - - Ref.
 Sandwich - - - 4.17 (0.11, 8.24)*

CI, confidence interval

Models adjusted for child’s age, child’s sex, highest household education, primary parent/guardian employment, SNAP participation, primary parent /guardian marital status, and primary parent/guardian weight status

%95th BMI percentile refers to the percentage of the child’s age- and sex-specific 95th BMI percentile calculated using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention SAS macro

*

p<0.05