Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02476604

Seton Hill University--Personal Empowerment Program

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
70 (actual)
Sponsor
Walter Reed National Military Medical Center · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 30 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

It is widely acknowledged that cardiovascular disease prevention requires intervention as early in the human lifespan as practical. A window of opportunity presents in early adulthood when students gain independence as young adults attending university. In a three-phase investigation, this study will evaluate the behavioral patterns of university students in the domains of diet, exercise, stress management, smoking and sleep (phase 1). Informed with information from phase 1, a pilot study (phase 2) will test the feasibility of performing an intervention in university students consisting of an 8-week period during which the students will receive up to six text messages (by phone or iPad) per week, tailored to address the behavioral issues that the student has identified as needing improvement and for which the student has indicated a desire to make change. Using lessons learned in phase 2, a randomized, controlled trial of the 8 week intervention (phase 3) will compare intervention subjects with controls for outcomes of behavior change, measures of anthropometric data, and serum markers of cardiovascular risk to test the impact of the intervention

Detailed description

This proposal aims to study the issues of health behaviors in the domains of diet, exercise, stress, and sleep. We aim to improve health behaviors in these domains by evaluating lifestyle choices and communication preferences with a three phase investigation. Phase 1 has the specific objective of lifestyle assessment. Phase 1 will evaluate dietary habits and choices, exercise practices, perceived stress levels, and quantity and timing of sleep utilizing a web-based health survey. The web-based survey tool will populate a secure research database. The data will include demographic information, anthropometric data, actigraphic data to measure exercise levels and sleep time, and laboratory studies that measure glucose metabolism, lipids, and other laboratory markers for cardiovascular risk assessment. Phase 2 constitutes a pilot study in a limited number of university students to determine the feasibility of causing healthy behavior change with the use of electronic messaging to university students up to six times per week over 8 weeks. Experience from this feasibility study will inform the design of Phase 3. Phase 3 will measure improvements in the lifestyle behaviors of students as a result of health coaching and electronic feedback messages over an 8 week period comparing their indices of health with a control group that does not receive the coaching and electronic feedback messages. Utilizing lessons learned from Phase 2, subjects randomized to an intervention arm but not subjects randomized to a control arm, will receive health coaching and electronic messages at the rate of up to six times per week over an 8 week period. Before and after this intervention period, measurements of lifestyle choices, anthropometrics, actigraphy for objective exercise and sleep patterns, and cardiac-relevant laboratory studies will be measured. Data from the intervention group will be compared with that of the control group.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALhealth coaching and electronic messagingUsing using an iPAD or notebook PC, students will receive electronic messaging aimed at encouraging adherence to behavioral goals previously set via discussions with the health coaches. The messages will be received 3 to 6 times per week for the 8 week intervention period.

Timeline

Start date
2012-01-01
Primary completion
2015-06-01
Completion
2015-06-01
First posted
2015-06-19
Last updated
2016-05-18

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02476604. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.