Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00596674

Health Promotion for Women With Fibromyalgia

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
177 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Texas at Austin · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Women with chronic disabling conditions such as fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS) must manage a wide variety of disease-related, intrapersonal, and environmental demands to maintain their health and quality of life. Engaging in health-promoting behaviors is one strategy recommended to manage disease symptoms and enhance quality of life (USDHHS, 2000). The purpose of this four-year study is to refine and test a theoretically and empirically based intervention to promote the health and well being of women with the chronic disabling condition of fibromyalgia. We hypothesize that women who participate in the "Lifestyle Counts" Intervention will report more greater self-efficacy for health behaviors, more frequent health behaviors and more positive health and quality of life than women in the comparison group.

Detailed description

This wellness intervention, originally developed and tested in a randomized clinical trial of women with MS (N=113), resulted in significant improvements in self-efficacy, health behaviors and improvements in pain, social functioning, mental health and emotional role-functioning. The specific aims of this study are to examine the effects of the adapted wellness intervention on self-efficacy, resources, barriers, health behaviors and health outcomes for women with fibromyalgia. A sample of 160 women with FMS will be recruited to participate in a randomized clinical study to determine the effects of this wellness intervention that includes an eight week health promotion/behavior change component and 3 months of follow-up phone support. Content regarding stress management, lifestyle adjustment, physical activity, nutrition and women's health issues will be presented with an emphasis on the unique adaptations and associated skills required to empower women with the tools for exercising personal control over their health behaviors. The effects of the intervention on outcome variables will be assessed over an 8-month period with measurements at baseline, 2 months (immediately after the educational/skill-building component), 5 months (after 3 months of phone support) and at 8 months.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALLifestyle Counts8 weeks of classes focused on health behavior change, individualized goal setting and 3 months of follow-up phone support
OTHERAttention Control8 weeks of classes on general health information topics followed by 3 months of phone calls to solicit questions

Timeline

Start date
2003-07-01
Primary completion
2007-01-01
Completion
2008-05-01
First posted
2008-01-17
Last updated
2012-04-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00596674. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.