Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02630953

Culturally and Linguistically Adapted Physical Activity Intervention for Latinas

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
214 (actual)
Sponsor
University of California, San Diego · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The overall goals of this renewal are to replicate the findings of Seamos Saludables in Latina women, increase the effectiveness of the intervention, and measure intervention-related changes in clinical biomarkers. We will enhance the existing intervention by incorporating participant feedback (desire for greater interactivity and accountability), further targeting Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) constructs that were not influenced overall by the original intervention yet improved amongst our most successful participants (social support, outcome expectancies), and responding to changing trends and technology use in Latinos. We will conduct a clinical trial among Latina women in California randomized to either 1) the original Seamos Saludables tailored print only intervention or 2) a theory and text messaging-enhanced interactive technology based version of the Seamos Saludables intervention. We will also measure changes in cardiovascular and metabolic biomarkers (e.g., HbA1c, and LDL) to assess potential clinical impact of the intervention.

Detailed description

Latinos are the largest racial/ethnic minority group in the U.S., and report substantial and widening health disparities. Prevalence of type II diabetes is 60-100% higher in Latinos than in non-Latino Whites, and incidence in Latinos is projected to increase by 500% by 20503. The largest disparities are projected for Latino women (Latinas). Rates of overweight and obesity are 23% and 37% higher in Latinas than in White women respectively, and have grown faster in Mexican American women, by far the largest subgroup of Latinas, than in White women during the past decade. Given that Latinos are projected to comprise nearly one-third of the US population by 2050, this signifies a pressing public health concern in terms of costs, diminished quality of life, and lost life years. Interventions are therefore needed that are not only linguistically adapted for this population but address their specific barriers. "Mediated" intervention delivery approaches (e.g., mail, phone, or web delivered) that emphasize home-based, lifestyle activities show larger effect sizes than face-to-face approaches, are more cost-effective, are likely more sustainable, and may be particularly appropriate for Latinas, as they reduce the burden of time, childcare, and transportation, barriers commonly cited by Latinas. Thus in the previously funded parent grant (R01NR011295) we responded to PAR-07-379, "Behavioral and Social Science Research on Understanding and Reducing Health Disparities," by modifying an existing print-based mail-delivered PA intervention and adapting it specifically for Latinas in the North Eastern U.S. with low acculturation, literacy, and socioeconomic status (SES), and testing the modified intervention in a randomized controlled trial (N=266). Participants in the PA intervention arm showed significantly greater increases in at least moderate intensity activity, increasing from 1.87 min/week at baseline to 73.36 min/week at 6 months (vs. 3.02 min/week to 32.98 min/week in a contact control group). However, this is still well below the national guidelines of 150 minutes per week. This intervention therefore shows potential in promoting initial PA adoption, yet enhancements are needed to further help people achieve levels of PA that will prevent disease and reduce health disparities. The objectives of this renewal are to 1) enhance the intervention to achieve greater increases in PA, 2) assess its potential clinical impact by measuring changes in biomarkers, and 3) increase its generalizability by replicating it in Latina women, all of which would further the goal of designing an innovative behavioral intervention to promote health and prevent illness in diverse populations.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALOriginal Tailored InterventionThe intervention includes regular mailings: weekly in month 1, biweekly in months 2 and 3, monthly in months 4 to 6, and a maintenance dose. Mailings consist of; 1) Manuals matched to the participant's current level of motivational readiness to change, based on TTM 2) Individually tailored computerized expert system feedback reports based on the participant's answers to monthly questionnaires. The computer expert system draws from a bank of over 330 messages developed from previous studies that address different levels of psychosocial and environmental factors affecting PA. 3) PA tip sheets addressing PA barriers specifically identified by Latinas in our formative research (e.g., caregiving duties, neighborhood safety).
BEHAVIORALEnhanced Tailored InterventionParticipants in the Enhanced Tailored arm will receive all the intervention components of the original tailored intervention, as well as: 1) additional print materials; 2) more in-depth tailored reports; and 3) text-messages. Self-monitoring was an important aspect in increasing PA in our previous trials however, participants were only asked to turn in the self-monitoring logs once a month. Based on the importance of self-monitoring and feedback from participants (R01NR011295; R01CA15994) that they wanted greater accountability and interactivity, we added a text-message component for self-monitoring.

Timeline

Start date
2016-02-01
Primary completion
2019-07-31
Completion
2019-07-31
First posted
2015-12-15
Last updated
2021-03-04
Results posted
2021-03-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02630953. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.