# Tiny Bites, a digital health intervention delivered in early childhood education and care centres to support educators and caregivers to prevent childhood obesity: study protocol for a cluster randomised controlled trial

**Authors:** Sze Lin Yoong, Melanie Lum, Gloria K W Leung, Nicole Pearson, Helen Truby, Clare Dix, Najma A Moumin, Luke Wolfenden, Jaithri Ananthapavan, Alice Grady, John Wiggers, Tessa Delaney, Lucie Rychetnik, Maria Romiti, Hannah Lamont, Sonya Stanley, Michelle Lim, Chris Oldmeadow, Nadia Mastersson, Rachel Sutherland

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-106436 · 2025-11-23

## TL;DR

Tiny Bites is a digital health program aiming to prevent childhood obesity by supporting educators and caregivers in early childhood education centers.

## Contribution

This study introduces a novel digital health intervention targeting obesity prevention through early childhood education and caregiver engagement.

## Key findings

- The study will assess the impact of Tiny Bites on child body mass index (zBMI) over 18 months.
- Secondary outcomes include breastfeeding duration, diet quality, and responsive feeding practices.
- The trial will evaluate program cost-effectiveness and engagement among educators and caregivers.

## Abstract

Infant feeding practices in the first 2 years of life are linked to long-term weight trajectories. Despite the importance of obesity prevention interventions, there are no randomised controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating early childhood education and care (ECEC) and primary caregiver-targeted interventions on child weight and feeding outcomes.

To assess the efficacy of an 18-month digital health intervention (Tiny Bites) delivered to ECEC services and primary caregivers of children aged 4 to ≤12 months on child age-adjusted and sex-adjusted body mass index-for-age z-score (zBMI) relative to usual care control in the Hunter New England (HNE) region of New South Wales, Australia.

This type 1 hybrid cluster RCT will include up to 60 ECEC services and 540 children/caregiver dyads. The intervention supports ECEC services and caregivers to deliver recommended responsive feeding practices to infants. ECEC services will receive access to an online assessment platform, training and resources, and implementation support. Primary caregivers will receive text messages, monthly e-newsletters, online links and direct communication from ECEC services. We will assess the impact on child zBMI at 18-month follow-up. Secondary outcomes include duration of consuming any breastmilk, child diet and caregiver responsive feeding practices. We will also assess ECEC policy and practice implementation related to targeted feeding practices, programme cost effectiveness, adverse effects and engagement with the programme (ECECs and caregivers). For the primary outcome, between-group differences will be assessed for paired data using two-level hierarchical linear regression models.

Ethics approval has been provided by HNE Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC) (2023/ETH01158), Deakin University (2024-202) and University of Newcastle HREC (R-2024-0039). Trial results will be submitted for publication in peer-reviewed journals, presented at scientific conferences locally and internationally and to relevant practice stakeholders.

ACTRN12624000576527.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** obesity (MESH:D009765)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12645655/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12645655