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Challenge!

About Us

Challenge! was a home- and community-based health promotion/obesity prevention program targeting urban African American adolescents in Baltimore City. The effectiveness of Challenge! was studied as a randomized controlled trial with support from the Maternal and Child Health Bureau (grants R40MC00241 and R40MC04297), the General Clinical Research Centers Program (grant M01 RR16500), the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Thomas Wilson Sanitarium for Children of Baltimore City and General Mills Champions for Healthy Kids.

The primary goal of Challenge! was to prevent overweight and the accumulation of excess body fat during adolescence. Secondary goals were to increase physical activity (increase time spent in moderate-vigorous activity and decrease time spent engaging in sedentary behaviors) and to improve diet (increase fruit and vegetable consumption, decrease sweetened beverage intake, decrease consumption of high-fat snack foods).


The Intervention

After formative research within the target community, an intervention was designed to promote healthy eating and increased activity among adolescents. The intervention was implemented over the course of three months and was delivered individually to each teen in their home or community by a college-age, gender-matched mentor (a "personal trainer"). The teens in the intervention group met with their personal trainer weekly to discuss each lesson and to set dietary and activity goals.


Measures

Data collection for Challenge! began in July 2002 and ended in December 2006. At the baseline evaluation, 235 adolescents between the ages of 11-16 were enrolled. Information was collected from the teens and their primary caregivers at baseline, 6 months (post-intervention), and 18 months (1 year post-intervention).

Teen Assessments

Caregiver Assessments


Principal Investigator

Maureen Black, Ph.D
Principal Investigator 

University of Maryland, School of Medicine
mblack@som.umaryland.edu

 

Team

Publications

Black, M. M., Arteaga, S. S., Sanders, J., Hager, E. R., Anliker, J. A., Gittelsohn, J., & Wang, Y. College mentors: A View From the Inside of an Intervention to Promote Health Behaviors and Prevent Obesity Among Low-Income, Urban, African American Adolescents. Journal of Health Promotion Practice,(2010, December 29); 1-7. doi:DOI: 10.1177/1524839910385899

Black, M. M., Hager, E. R., Le, K., Anliker, J., Arteaga, S., DiClemente, C., & Gittelsohn, J.Challenge! Health Promotion/Obesity Prevention Mentorship Model Among Urban, Black Adolescents. Journal of Pediatrics,(2010, August);126(2), 280-288.

Snitker S, Le KY, Hager E, Caballero B, Black MM. Influence of Physical Activity and Body Composition on Glucose Homeostasis in a Community Sample of Adolescents. Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine. 2007 July; 161: 677-683.

Mitola AL, Papas MA, Le K, Fusillo L, Black MM. Agreement with satisfaction in adolescent body size between female caregivers and teens from a low-income African-American community. J Pediatr Psychol. 2007 Jan-Feb; 32(1): 42-51.

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