Pediatric Health Coaching Could Transform Prevention

Despite decades of research on prevention and treatment, many families still receive only brief advice about nutrition and exercise during routine pediatric visits. While doctors understand what interventions can help, the healthcare system often lacks the structure and resources needed to support families through meaningful, long-term lifestyle changes. A growing group of experts believes that pediatric health coaching could help close this gap, offering continuous support to children and their families while strengthening the healthcare workforce.
Recent research has also revealed troubling trends in pediatric diabetes. An analysis of children enrolled in public insurance programs found that diabetes prevalence rose steadily between 2016 and 2021. Even more concerning was the sharp increase in cases of type 2 diabetes, a condition once considered almost exclusively an adult disease.
These findings are significant because public programs such as Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program insure nearly half of the country’s children. Health trends in these populations often reflect broader national patterns. Although physicians and pediatric specialists understand how lifestyle habits affect long-term health, clinical visits rarely provide enough time to address the complex factors influencing a child’s behavior.
Typical pediatric appointments last about 15 minutes. In that short window, clinicians must evaluate growth, address medical concerns, discuss vaccinations, and offer general health advice. Conversations about diet, physical activity, sleep patterns, stress, and family dynamics are often limited.
As a result, families may leave appointments with recommendations such as “eat healthier” or “exercise more,” but without the ongoing guidance needed to implement those changes. This creates what researchers call an implementation gap — a disconnect between medical knowledge and real-world behavior change.
Healthy lifestyle changes are rarely as simple as they sound. Daily habits are shaped by a wide range of social, environmental, and emotional factors.
Families may struggle with busy schedules and limited time for home-cooked meals, financial stress, limited access to healthy foods, school environments that restrict physical activity, cultural traditions around food, emotional relationships with eating, and more.
As Dr. Arielle Levi explains, behavior change requires addressing more than just diet or exercise:
Health coaching goes deeper than simply encouraging behavior change. We’re looking at mindset, family dynamics, and the stories families carry about health. When we work with children, we’re really coaching the entire family.
Addressing these factors requires time, trust, and consistent communication, resources that traditional clinical settings often lack. Pediatric health coaching focuses on helping families create sustainable lifestyle habits through structured, ongoing support. Rather than simply instructing patients what to do, coaches work collaboratively with families to identify achievable goals and develop personalized strategies for reaching them.
Key components of health coaching often include motivational interviewing to explore readiness for change, family-centered goal setting that involves parents and caregivers, habit-building strategies that focus on small, sustainable steps, regular check-ins between clinical appointments, and coordination with physicians and care teams.
The goal is to empower families to take ownership of their health decisions while maintaining accountability and encouragement along the way.
In an interview with The American Journal of Managed Care (AJMC), Dr. Thea Runyan, DrPH, MPH, NBC-HWC, and cofounder and CEO of the Pediatric Health Coach Academy, emphasizes that these programs already have strong evidence behind them:
We know intensive lifestyle behavior change works. It’s recommended by national clinical guidelines, yet many families can’t access these programs because they aren’t covered by insurance.
One of the biggest barriers to implementing health coaching is the lack of reimbursement. Although intensive behavioral programs are recommended by organizations such as the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and the American Academy of Pediatrics, many insurance plans do not cover coaching services.
This leaves a major gap in care. Dr. Runyan notes:
The services we’re promoting — including one-on-one health coaching — often aren’t covered. That creates a huge access gap for families who could benefit from sustained behavioral support.
Expanding the pediatric health coaching workforce could help fill this void. Trained coaches could support families between clinical visits, helping them implement lifestyle changes that physicians simply do not have time to manage.
Health coaching may also help address disparities in child health outcomes. By working closely with families over time, coaches can identify barriers that clinicians may not see during short office visits. These might include transportation issues, financial constraints, limited access to healthy foods, or high levels of household stress.
Because coaching emphasizes collaboration and cultural understanding, it can help families develop solutions that work within their specific circumstances. This personalized approach may be particularly valuable for underserved communities where rates of obesity and metabolic disease are often higher.
New medications for obesity and diabetes, particularly drugs known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, have attracted significant attention in recent years. While these treatments can be effective for some patients, experts caution that medication alone cannot solve the broader childhood obesity crisis.
Lifestyle habits, environmental factors, and family dynamics still play a critical role in long-term health outcomes. Without consistent behavioral support, even effective medications may fail to produce lasting results. Health coaching could serve as a complementary strategy, helping families maintain healthier habits that reinforce medical treatments.
Dr. Levi highlights the importance of engaging children in ways that feel motivating and positive:
When health coaches are properly trained, kids genuinely look forward to meeting with them. That engagement is incredibly powerful because meaningful change happens when children actually want to participate.
The steady rise in childhood obesity and pediatric diabetes signals that traditional approaches may no longer be enough. While medical research continues to advance, the challenge of translating knowledge into everyday behavior remains one of the biggest barriers to improving child health.
Ultimately, preventing chronic disease may require more than clinical expertise — it may require reimagining how healthcare supports families in their daily lives.
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Source: “How Health Coaching Could Help Close the Behavior-Change Gap in Pediatric Obesity,” AJMC, 3/10/26
Source: “White Paper: A Workforce Strategy for Pediatric Obesity and Chronic Disease Prevention,” Pediatric Health Coaching, undated.
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