Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02247219

Promoting Health in Healthy Living Centres - a Clinical Study Among Adults

Promoting Health in Healthy Living Centres - Does it Work, How Does it Work and Why?

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
118 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Bergen · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The study aims at: Using Intervention mapping as a planning approach for behavior change intervention programs, based on an ecological approach to health and local community and user participation. * Explore the behavioral change processes utilizing qualitative methods. * Develop theory-based behavior change programs across different domain at healthy living centres. * Evaluate the effect of behavior change intervention programs across different domains. * Increase health providers' competence in effective behavioral change intervention techniques by networks and education seminars between municipalities and research groups. * The programs will specifically target the underlying causes of chronic disease. The investigators will map the distribution of lifestyle habits among individuals and families. The investigators will also explore how lifestyle habits relate to known determinants of social health inequality, such as adverse previous experiences, participation in working life and low income. * The investigators also intend to study if socioeconomic differences are of importance for entering or dropping out of HLC interventions, and the ability to sustain lifestyle changes. The investigators will do so by stratified analyses, or by using socioeconomic variables as determinants in effect analyses.

Detailed description

Approaches, hypotheses and choice of method A multidisciplinary team of researchers will work to realize this project according to a systematic stepwise approach that combines the use of the PRECEDE-PROCEED model and Intervention Mapping (IM) protocol. The PRECEDE-PROCEED model is a conceptual model serving the needs of the current project with an educational and ecological approach in health program planning. IM will be used as a planning approach to develop theory- and evidence based health promoting intervention programs. Following the IM process, it maps the path from needs assessment, development of program objectives, selection of intervention methods and strategies, and program design. A benefit of IM is its linkage with community-based participatory research as it includes engagement of community members to identify and refine priority areas. Thus, the process of including IM in developing intervention programs will secure that users and staff in the healthy living centres will have significant autonomy and may influence the development of the intervention programme, and tailor the intervention to fit local needs. In the initial steps of the IM process will explore the research field utilizing qualitative research methods. The investigators will use focus groups and in-depth interviews to obtain sufficient information to tailor the intervention to local needs and resources. The investigators intend to explore the expectations staff and users of HLCs have about the different intervention programmes, and how they perceive attendance. The research program will have Self Determination Theory (SDT) as a theoretical point of departure and as an overall theoretical framework for qualitative studies and RCTs of behavioral intervention programs across different behavioural domains. Even though our logic model for understanding behavioral change is linear, focusing on the presumed cause-effect identified in theory and empirical research, the investigators acknowledge that the behavioral treatment programs and proposed outcomes are part of a complex multilevel system (an ecological approach) (Bartholomew et al.2011). An ecological way of analyzing health problems and solutions support the use of a variety of theories when developing a program, as opposed to one single theory. Theories can help in describing the at-risk groups and environmental agents, understand the health-promotion behaviors and environmental agents, understanding the heath-promotion behaviors, and finding methods to promote change (Bartholomew, 2011). The 0-hypothesis in the controlled studies is that the different behavioral treatment programs have no effects compared with controls. Alternative research hypotheses are: * Participants who perceive the interpersonal health care-climate as autonomy supportive, will report more autonomous reasons for attending the program and following it's guidelines (self-determined). * The program will predict increases in autonomous motivation for behavioral change, perceived self-efficacy for program constructs: e.g. physical exercise, healthy eating, and quality of life. * The program will improve the participants' health behavior. * The program will improve the participants' self-perceived health and risk factors of non-communicable diseases. The investigators will also measure effects on health behaviour and health in ordinary practice in the municipalities, in studying effects of systemic and organisational interventions. This will benefit the external validity of the research project.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCounselling and education individually and in groupsThe counselling method is based om Motivational Interviewing

Timeline

Start date
2014-06-01
Primary completion
2015-09-01
Completion
2018-03-01
First posted
2014-09-23
Last updated
2018-05-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Norway

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02247219. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.