Replicability, adaptability and long-term impact of the ‘Healthy Youngsters, Healthy Dads’ program in Newcastle, Australia
Lee M Ashton, Jacqueline A Grounds, Alyce T Barnes, Emma R Pollock, Myles D Young, Stevie-Lee Kennedy, Anna T Rayward, Daniel R Lee, Philip J Morgan

TL;DR
The 'Healthy Youngsters, Healthy Dads' program successfully improved health behaviors in fathers and children when delivered by trained facilitators in the community.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the replicability and adaptability of the HYHD program in a community setting with long-term effects.
Findings
The program achieved high recruitment, attendance, compliance, and satisfaction rates.
Fathers showed sustained improvements in physical activity, diet, and parenting practices at 12 months.
Children's screen time and dietary intake improved, with some effects lasting 12 months.
Abstract
‘Healthy Youngsters, Healthy Dads’ (HYHD) targets fathers to improve the health of their preschool-aged children. In a previous randomized trial, fathers and children experienced meaningful improvements in physical activity and eating behaviours. The next phase is to test the replicability and adaptability of HYHD when delivered in the community by trained facilitators. Fathers/father-figures and children aged 3–5 years were recruited from Newcastle, Australia into a 9-week, non-randomized trial with assessments at baseline, 10 weeks, and 12 months. The primary outcome was achievement of pre-registered targets for recruitment (≥ 96 dyads), attendance (≥ 70%), compliance (completing ≥ 70% of home-based tasks), fidelity (≥ 80% of content delivered as intended) and program satisfaction (≥ 4/5). Secondary outcomes included physical activity, nutrition, screen time and parenting measures.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Development and Preterm Care · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
