Pediatric obesity has increased dramatically in economically developed countries over the past several decades [
1]. The most recent national estimates from the Canadian Community Health Survey revealed that 26% of Canadian children and youth were overweight while 8% were obese [
2]. These data showed overweight and obesity increased 50% and 167%, respectively, since measured height and weight data were last collected from Canadian children in the late 1970s. This is an alarming trend since a high level of body fat in children and youth is linked to numerous adverse health outcomes including high blood pressure, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease [
3]. In addition to the high proportion of boys and girls impacted by obesity-related medical co-morbidities, the psychosocial consequences of having an unhealthy weight are likely most salient for families. A number of reports have studied the connections between pediatric obesity and depression [
4,
5], anxiety [
5], self-esteem [
6], body image [
7], executive functioning [
8], as well as bias and stigmatization [
9,
10]. Collectively, this body of evidence highlights the variety of factors that influence the health and well-being of children with obesity.
There have been numerous calls for the development and evaluation of pediatric weight management interventions [
11-
13]. Such interventions are usually designed to improve lifestyle behaviours to reduce adiposity and risk factors for chronic diseases including type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Though researchers outside of Canada have established fundamental features of pediatric weight management, their application in a Canadian context has been limited. The Canadian Obesity Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) reinforced this knowledge gap [
11]; notably, of all the weight management research used to inform the CPG, none of the evidence was Canadian. This situation is undesirable since Canada’s cultural, social, geographic, and health services uniqueness suggests that weight management interventions that work in other countries may not translate universally or successfully [
14,
15]. Despite these issues, a common theme underscored in almost every published report on pediatric weight management is the central role played by parents [
16,
17].
Parents play an invaluable role in creating a supportive home environment to enable their children to make healthy lifestyle choices [
18,
19]. Parents also serve as important role models given that parental attitudes and behaviours regarding physical activity and nutrition can have a substantial impact, both positively and negatively, on the attitudes and behaviours of their children [
20-
24]. Parenting style is also an important factor that impacts child health outcomes. In research extending Baumrind’s classical descriptions of parenting styles [
25], children of parents who demonstrate controlling, restrictive behaviours exhibit less healthy dietary behaviours and are at increased risk of obesity
versus children of parents who demonstrate more supportive, authoritative practices [
26-
30]. In addition, data on psychosocial stress within families suggests that improving the family system and parent–child relationships may reduce the risk of pediatric obesity [
31]. Taken together, these observations support the need for weight management interventions that attend to both cognitive and behavioural factors within the family context.
The key role played by parents in pediatric weight management interventions was established in the early 1980s by the formative research conducted by Leonard Epstein and colleagues [
28,
32-
35]. Their work has been extended in recent years through research focused on parents as agents of change (PAC) in lieu of treating parents and children as a dyad. Intervening with parents exclusively to address other health concerns in children and youth has been applied successfully in the past [
36-
38], but represents a newer model for care for pediatric weight management. If parent-only interventions are as effective as interventions that include children only or parent–child dyads, a parent-only model would be the most efficient (and likely cost-effective) treatment option. Indeed, emerging evidence supports a PAC treatment approach. For instance, in a randomized, one-year study of obese 6 – 11

year olds, [
Golan et al. 39] compared two weight management interventions (one for children exclusively
versus one for parents exclusively). While children in both groups lost weight, the reduction in percent overweight was greater for children in the parent-only group compared to those in the group that included children exclusively; program adherence and retention were also superior in the parent-only group. More recently, Golan and colleagues compared child weight loss in parent-only
versus parent

+

child groups. Obese children of parents in the parent-only group showed greater reductions in adiposity compared to children in the parent

+

child group, improvements that were maintained at 18-months follow-up [
40]. Since these initial reports, data from larger, higher-quality clinical trials have confirmed the beneficial effects of PAC interventions in pediatric weight management [
41-
44].
Though the aforementioned data have highlighted the fundamental leadership role parents can play in helping their children to achieve success in pediatric weight management, the interventions have provided limited insight into how and why the interventions promote behavioural and cognitive changes [
45]. The current study builds on the seminal work of Golan and colleagues by applying a PAC approach, which includes a theoretically-based, clinical treatment modality (cognitive behavioural therapy, CBT) in comparison to the traditional psycho-educational approach that helps to interpret study outcomes. Although CBT has been used previously for treating pediatric obesity [
46,
47], our study addresses family-oriented issues with parents exclusively rather than focusing on boys and girls themselves. We believe that working with parents on their own may also allay concerns regarding intervening with children (i.e., stigmatization, low motivation, a lack of identifying obesity as a health concern). Further, by evaluating a PAC CBT-based intervention in an out-patient clinical setting in our local children’s hospital, the current trial is designed to expand on the promising findings from efficacy-based studies to determine the effectiveness of PAC interventions in a real-world environment, which often includes children with severe obesity. This paper describes the protocol our team is using to examine two PAC-based interventions for pediatric weight management. We hypothesize that children whose parents complete the CBT-based PAC intervention will achieve greater reductions in adiposity, improved lifestyle behaviours and psychosocial outcomes, and decreased cardiometabolic risk factors compared to children whose parents complete a psycho-education-based (PEP) PAC intervention, which is similar in content and structure to the CBT-based version, but does not include elements of cognitive behavioural therapy.