Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02329262

A Skills-based RCT for Physical Activity Using Peer Mentors

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
571 (actual)
Sponsor
Ohio State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
14 Years – 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This approach will train peer mentors to deliver a culturally appropriate intervention and provide social support that is critical for facilitating and sustaining health behavior change. The objective is to compare the efficacy of an innovative healthy lifestyle skills mentoring program (Mentored Planning to be Active \[MBA\]) to a teacher led program (PBA) for increasing physical activity in Appalachian high school teens. MBA emphasizes the social determinants of health by using a social networking approach that trains peer mentors to support targeted teens

Detailed description

The goal of this study is to positively impact the physical activity patterns to improve health outcomes including the high rates of obesity in Appalachian teens. The approach will train peer mentors to deliver the culturally appropriate intervention and provide social support that is critical for facilitating and sustaining health behavior change. The primary objective is to compare the efficacy of an innovative healthy lifestyle skills mentoring program (Mentored Planning to be Active \[MBA\]) to a teacher led program (PBA) for increasing physical activity in Appalachian high school teens. MBA emphasizes the social determinants of health by using a social networking approach that trains peer mentors to support targeted teens. Refined over the course of 3 studies,2-4 PBA is a ten-lesson unit delivered over 10 weeks and designed to teach self-regulation of physical activity among teens. Expanding PBA to mentors via MBA has the potential to promote and sustain adoption of daily regular physical activity through self-regulation of physical activity in discretionary time. With MBA delivery, physical activity is tailored to personal interests, talents, and neighborhood environment. MBA empowers students to plan and evaluate their own personal activity plan. It is predicted that by serving as role models, peer mentors will improve their own lifestyle behaviors, providing a double-edged intervention. It is also predicted that providing intense and structured social support to teens via peer mentors will result in better health outcomes compared to teacher-based support alone (usual care). The plan is to conduct a group randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effects of a culturally and theoretically based behavioral intervention delivered by peer mentors (MBA) on adolescent healthy behaviors (daily physical activity, regular exercise, and sedentary behaviors) and physical health outcomes (BMI, body fat) compared to PBA delivered in a classroom setting by a teacher.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMentoring to be Active with AccelerometersTrained high school mentors will deliver a 10 session curriculum targeting physical activity to younger teens.
BEHAVIORALPlanning to be Active with AccelerometersHealth education teachers will deliver the 10 session curriculum targeting physical activity to high school students enrolled in health courses.

Timeline

Start date
2015-09-01
Primary completion
2018-11-01
Completion
2018-11-01
First posted
2014-12-31
Last updated
2025-03-05
Results posted
2025-03-05

Locations

20 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02329262. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.