fruehstArt Programme
Cross-source consensus on fruehstArt Programme from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
Uses
How it works
Dosage & preparation
Highlighted claims
- fruehstArt is a family-centred, cross-sectoral, outreach-based overweight and obesity prevention programme for preschool children in the North Rhine region of Germany. — Evaluation of an innovative family-centred care and prevention intervention for children with overweight and obesity: a mixed-methods study protocol of the randomised controlled fruehstArt study in Germany
- fruehstArt combines home-based counselling by trained coaches with an e-health platform and web app, and integrates these with existing SHI-funded services and municipal offerings. — Evaluation of an innovative family-centred care and prevention intervention for children with overweight and obesity: a mixed-methods study protocol of the randomised controlled fruehstArt study in Germany
- The three core innovative components of fruehstArt are outreach home-based counselling, a web-based e-health platform, and cross-sectoral integration of SHI, DRV, and municipal services. — Evaluation of an innovative family-centred care and prevention intervention for children with overweight and obesity: a mixed-methods study protocol of the randomised controlled fruehstArt study in Germany
- For children with obesity (BMI above the 97th percentile), paediatricians can prescribe DRV-funded rehabilitation programmes. — Evaluation of an innovative family-centred care and prevention intervention for children with overweight and obesity: a mixed-methods study protocol of the randomised controlled fruehstArt study in Germany
- Outpatient rehabilitation lasts 6 months at two sessions per week combining group and individual appointments, while inpatient rehabilitation lasts approximately 4 weeks on-site. — Evaluation of an innovative family-centred care and prevention intervention for children with overweight and obesity: a mixed-methods study protocol of the randomised controlled fruehstArt study in Germany