Melanie K. Bean, Ph.D. - US grants
Affiliations: | 2007 | Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, United States |
Area:
Clinical Psychology, Public Health, Elementary EducationWe are testing a new system for linking grants to scientists.
The funding information displayed below comes from the NIH Research Portfolio Online Reporting Tools and the NSF Award Database.The grant data on this page is limited to grants awarded in the United States and is thus partial. It can nonetheless be used to understand how funding patterns influence mentorship networks and vice-versa, which has deep implications on how research is done.
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Melanie K. Bean is the likely recipient of the following grants.Years | Recipients | Code | Title / Keywords | Matching score |
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2016 — 2017 | Bean, Melanie K | R21Activity Code Description: To encourage the development of new research activities in categorical program areas. (Support generally is restricted in level of support and in time.) |
Improving Adolescent Obesity Treatment: Exploring the Role of Parents @ Virginia Commonwealth University ? DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): There is an urgent need for innovative approaches to obesity prevention and treatment, particularly among African Americans (AA), a population at increased risk of obesity and its associated morbidity and mortality. Research and clinical practice guidelines consistently recommend that parents should be included in their children's obesity treatment, yet the most effective strategy to engage parents in adolescent obesity treatment is unclear. The adolescent period presents substantial challenges to family-based care, as youth experience increased desire for independence and autonomy, contributing to resistance to authority figures; yet they still rely on parents for many needs. Given these challenges, it is not surprising that research investigating specific clinical paradigms for involvng parents in adolescent obesity treatments is inconsistent. To that end, the current application pilots two distinct approaches for involving parents in their adolescents' obesity treatment. TEENS (Teaching, Encouragement, Exercise, Nutrition, Support) is a family-based, multidisciplinary behavioral treatment program targeting primarily AA, obese adolescents. This investigative team previously demonstrated that participation in the TEENS intervention is associated with significant reductions in body mass index (BMI) at 6 months. In TEENS, parents were included in monthly groups to support their adolescent's weight management. Although parent weight was not targeted, a significant correlation between parent and adolescent BMI change was found. These findings highlight the importance of parental involvement and suggest that parent weight management might be an important intervention target. Indeed, directly targeting parent weight loss within adolescent treatment might be associated with even greater adolescent BMI reductions, as parents engaged in concurrent weight management might make greater changes to the shared environment and serve as powerful role models, given their common goals. Towards that end and building on our previous work, we developed TEENS+, a family-based adolescent obesity intervention. This application proposes a randomized controlled pilot to determine the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of two parent treatments within TEENS+ among 96 overweight or obese adolescents (BMI>85th percentile) and parent(s) (BMI>25 kg/m2). Families will be randomized to one of two 4-month treatments: 1) TEENS+Parents as Coaches (PAC), engaging parents as helpers in their child's weight management, or 2) TEENS+Parent Weight Loss (PWL), engaging parents in their own weight management. All adolescents will participate in the TEENS+ protocol, which includes nutrition education with dietary goals, supervised physical activity, and behavioral support, and integrates motivational interviewing to enhance treatment engagement. Assessments will be completed at 0, 4, and 7 months. Results of this investigation will inform a subsequent larger trial investigating the role of parents in adolescent obesity treatment, targeting predominately African American families. |
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2016 — 2017 | Bean, Melanie K | R03Activity Code Description: To provide research support specifically limited in time and amount for studies in categorical program areas. Small grants provide flexibility for initiating studies which are generally for preliminary short-term projects and are non-renewable. |
The Impact of Salad Bars On Fruit, Vegetable, and Energy Intake in Elementary Schools @ Virginia Commonwealth University PROJECT SUMMARY Despite the importance of fruits and vegetables (FV) as essential components of a healthy diet, most children do not consume the recommended number of servings of these foods. School meals account for a significant portion of children's overall dietary intake and play a major role in reducing food insecurity, a problem paradoxically linked with pediatric obesity. Changing the school nutritional environment is a cost-efficient and effective method for improving dietary intake and can significantly impact the pernicious problem of pediatric obesity. The 2010 Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA) mandated enhanced focus on FV in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP), and specifically requires children to take a fruit and/or vegetable at meals (the ?serve? model). However, there are significant concerns over increased FV plate waste under this mandate. Simultaneously, there is also great national support for school salad bars as a means to increase FV intake within the NSLP. Salad bars might be a particularly effective approach within the ?serve? model, as they foster choice, which is linked to increased FV consumption in children. However, little empirical research has investigated the impact of salad bars on FV intake in schools. Further, although FV consumption can facilitate healthy weight management if these foods replace items high in calories, there is a great need to better understand how increasing FV intake relates to children's overall diet quality and obesity risk. This is particularly important to investigate in low income and racial/ethnic minority children, who face disproportionate obesity risks and are most likely to be impacted by school obesity policies, such as the HHFKA, given their reliance on school meals. In this application, two matched, randomly selected Title 1 elementary schools, serving predominately African American and Hispanic children will be selected; one school has a salad bar (Intervention) and one serves proportioned FV only, standard under the revised NSLP (Control). Under the Community Eligibility Provision of the HHFKA, 100% of students are eligible to receive free meals. We will conduct plate waste assessments (~1600 meals over 4 days) and compare FV selection and consumption between schools. Further, given the unclear role of FV in obesity prevention, we will also conduct nutrition analyses to investigate if higher FV intake displaces calories from other sources, thus informing obesity prevention efforts. Results will make a significant contribution to obesity policy research by investigating the effectiveness of efforts aimed at increasing FV intake within the serve model, standard under the NSLP. Results will also inform related nutrition policies aimed at alleviating pediatric obesity. Data will inform a larger trial related to enhancing the effectiveness of the NSLP under the HHFKA. No prior studies have examined the effects of salad bars on FV and caloric intake in students attending schools with universal free meals, a setting with a powerful role in children's dietary intake. As such, this study has the potential to inform school nutrition policies and programming designed to enhance dietary intake in students at high obesity risk. |
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2019 — 2021 | Bean, Melanie K | R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
The Impact of Salad Bars On Dietary Consumption Patterns in Elementary School Students @ Virginia Commonwealth University PROJECT SUMMARY Despite the importance of fruits and vegetables (FVs) as essential components of a healthy diet, most children do not consume the recommended number of servings of these foods. School meals account for a significant portion of children's overall dietary intake. Changing the school environment is a cost-efficient and effective method for improving dietary intake and can significantly impact the pernicious problem of pediatric obesity. The 2010 Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA) mandated enhanced focus on FVs in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP), and specifically requires children to take a fruit and/or vegetable at meals (the ?serve? model). However, there are significant concerns over increased FV plate waste under this mandate. Simultaneously, there is great national support for school salad bars as a means to increase FV intake within the NSLP. Salad bars might be a particularly effective approach within the ?serve? model, as they foster choice, which is linked to increased FV consumption in children. However, little empirical research has investigated the impact of salad bars on FV intake in schools. Further, although FV consumption can facilitate healthy weight management if these foods replace items high in calories, there is a great need to better understand how increasing FV intake, and salad bars, relates to children's diet quality and energy intake at lunch within the NSLP. This is particularly important to investigate in low income and racial/ethnic minority children, who face disproportionate obesity risks and are most likely to be impacted by school obesity policies, such as the HHFKA, given their reliance on school meals. This time-sensitive application will use validated methods, informed by our extensive formative work, to conduct a comprehensive evaluation of salad bars in a northern Virginia school district. This district is installing salad bars into 141 elementary schools over 5-years, facilitating the conduct of a waitlist control, cluster randomized controlled trial. Specifically, 12 pairs of matched schools will be randomly selected: half receiving a salad bar (Intervention) and half serving pre-portioned FVs only, standard under the NSLP (Control). Thus groups will have different FV presentation methods; however all schools will be operating under a policy requiring students to take at least one FV serving. Schools will be matched on Title I status (a proxy for socioeconomic status) and percent of racial/ethnic minority students based on higher obesity risk. Dietary intake will be objectively assessed at lunch in each pair of schools, prior to (baseline), and 4-6 weeks after salad bars are installed (post), resulting in ~14,160 lunch observations throughout the study duration. We will also obtain cafeteria sales and NSLP participation data to examine how salad bars impact these critical revenue sources. Finally, we will assess implementation factors and cafeteria personnel's perspectives, to identify barriers and facilitators to salad bars and inform sustainability efforts. No prior RCTs have prospectively examined the effects of salad bars on FV and energy intake. As such, this study has great potential to inform school nutrition policies and programs designed to enhance dietary intake and reduce obesity. |
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2019 — 2021 | Bean, Melanie K | R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
The Role of Parents in Adolescent Obesity Treatment: Randomized Controlled Trial of Teens+ @ Virginia Commonwealth University PROJECT SUMMARY There is an urgent need for innovative approaches to adolescent obesity treatment, particularly among African Americans (AA), a population at increased risk of obesity and its associated morbidity and mortality. There is a particular dearth of research on the long-term efficacy of adolescent obesity treatments. Further, research and clinical practice guidelines consistently recommend that parents should be included in their adolescents' obesity treatment, yet the most effective strategy to engage parents in adolescent obesity treatment remains unclear. Towards that end, this investigation, (informed by R21HD084930), will conduct a fully-powered, randomized controlled trial, to examine the efficacy of two distinct approaches to involving parents in their adolescents' obesity treatment. Participants will be 210 12-16 year old adolescents (BMI>85th percentile) and parents (BMI>25 kg/m2) with overweight or obesity. Families will be randomized to one of two 4-month treatments: 1) TEENS+Parents as Coaches (PAC), engaging parents as helpers in their child's weight management via parent skills training, or 2) TEENS+Parent Weight Loss (PWL), engaging parents in their own behavioral weight management. All adolescents will participate in the TEENS+ protocol, which includes nutrition education with dietary goals, supervised physical activity, and behavioral support, and integrates motivational interviewing to enhance treatment engagement. Assessments of anthropometrics, dietary intake, physical activity, parenting and home environment variables will be completed at 0, 2, 4, 8, and 12 months with the primary endpoint at 12m follow-up. Results of this investigation have the potential to significantly advance science in this area and ultimately inform clinical practice guidelines related to the role of parents in adolescent obesity treatment. |
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