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Targeted self-regulation interventions in low-income children: Clinical trial results and implications for health behavior change

Abstract

Self-regulation, known as the ability to harness cognitive, emotional, and motivational resources to achieve goals, is hypothesized to contribute to health behaviors across the lifespan. Enhancing self-regulation early in life may increase positive health outcomes. During pre-adolescence, children assume increased autonomy in health behaviors (e.g., eating; physical activity), many of which involve self-regulation. This article presents results from a clinical trial (NCT03060863) that used a factorial design to test behavioral interventions designed to enhance self-regulation, specifically targeting executive functioning, emotion regulation, future-oriented thinking, and approach biases. Participants were 118 children (9–12 years of age, M = 10.2 years) who had a history of living in poverty. They were randomized to receive up to four interventions that were delivered via home visits. Self-regulation was assayed using behavioral tasks, observations, interviews, and parent- and child-report surveys. Results were that self-regulation targets were reliably assessed and that interventions were delivered with high fidelity. Intervention effect sizes were very small to moderate (d range = .02–.65, median = .14), and most were not statistically significant. Intercorrelation analyses indicated that associations between measures within each target varied based on the self-regulation target evaluated. Results are discussed with regard to the role of self-regulation-focused interventions in child health promotion. Implications of findings are reviewed for informing next steps in behavioral self-regulation interventions among children from low-income backgrounds.

Description

Keywords

Social Sciences, Psychology, Developmental, Psychology, Experimental, Psychology, Self-regulation, Health behavior, Intervention, Executive function, Emotion regulation, Future orientation, COGNITIVE BIAS MODIFICATION, EPISODIC FUTURE THINKING, AGE-RELATED-CHANGES, EXECUTIVE FUNCTION, TIME PERSPECTIVE, DECISION-MAKING, GAME ELEMENTS, SUBSTANCE USE, NIH TOOLBOX, ASSOCIATIONS, 1701 Psychology, 1702 Cognitive Sciences

Citation