Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04815278

NC Works4Health: Reducing Chronic Disease Risks in Socioeconomically Disadvantaged, Unemployed Populations

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
455 (actual)
Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The proposed study, NC Works4Health (NCW4H), builds on the strengths of long-standing academic-community research partnerships between this UNC at Chapel Hill (UNC) team of investigators and key stakeholders across health, social service, employment, and economic development sectors. The overall goal of this study is to test the effectiveness of a multilevel intervention that can be readily adopted by communities to reduce chronic disease risks in socioeconomically disadvantaged populations by (a) embedding prevention efforts in DSS-E programs at the individual level, and (b) enhancing supervisor supports for DSS-E hires at the employer level. Interventions at each level, and their joint effects, are designed to mitigate the psychological, behavioral, and clinically relevant risks for chronic disease onset, morbidity, and comorbidity that accrue with unemployment and the employment-entry transition.

Detailed description

Studies have shown that a single episode of unemployment can trigger a cascade of stress-related coping and behavioral processes that have deleterious effects on health. Notably, this cascade not only frequently results in psychological distress, but also accelerated weight gain (persisting up to 10 years regardless of re-employment), and elevated blood pressure. As such, individuals who experience unemployment are at a much higher risk for chronic disease development, comorbidity, and early mortality. Given inequities in the labor market, socioeconomically disadvantaged groups (i.e., those with less education, less income or wealth, and/or who are racial/ethnic minorities) are disproportionately, and more adversely affected by both unemployment and chronic disease, and feel this burden acutely in their everyday lives. Socioeconomically disadvantaged adults often receive public assistance benefits during unemployment episodes as well as job training and placement services through Department of Social Services Employment (DSS-E) programs; however, these programs do not include prevention-focused content to reduce the chronic disease risks that accrue during unemployment episodes. In addition, DSS-E efforts to help individuals succeed in securing and performing in a new job are often thwarted by implicit 'welfare'-related bias and insufficient supports in workplaces into which DSS-E clients are hired. Although the current absence of chronic disease prevention in DSS-E programs and lack of supports for DSS-E hires in workplaces compound chronic disease risks, it is also an area in which communities can address social determinants that are known to produce health inequities. The proposed study, NC Works4Health (NCW4H), builds on the strengths of long-standing academic-community research partnerships between this UNC at Chapel Hill (UNC) team of investigators and key stakeholders across health, social service, employment, and economic development sectors. The overall goal of this study is to test the effectiveness of a multilevel intervention that can be readily adopted by communities to reduce chronic disease risks in socioeconomically disadvantaged populations by (a) embedding prevention efforts in DSS-E programs at the individual level, and (b) enhancing supervisor supports for DSS-E hires at the employer level. Interventions at each level, and their joint effects, are designed to mitigate the psychological, behavioral, and clinically relevant risks for chronic disease onset, morbidity, and comorbidity that accrue with unemployment and the employment-entry transition. By collaborating across sectors to reduce health inequities, the specific aims will be met in two phases: Phase I With community partners and key stakeholders, make minor adaptations to two evidence-based interventions for use in a multilevel intervention that incorporates: (a) a chronic disease prevention program (CDPP) (individual level)into current DSS-E programs for unemployed adults, and (b) supervisor support in the workplace (employer level)into an existing network of employers with jobs that match the skill set of the DSS-E program population. Phase II Aim 1. To test the main effects of (a) the individual-level NC Works4Health intervention (Usual DSS-E + CDPP) compared to Usual DSS-E Support, and (b) the employer-level NC Works4Health intervention compared to usual workplace supports on primary and secondary outcomes, over time (at 3, 6, and 12 months from baseline), using a randomized, 2x2 factorial design. Aim 2. To test the joint effect of the individual-level + employer-level NC Works4Health interventions on primary and secondary outcomes, over time (at 3, 6, and 12 months from baseline). In the primary outcomes, the investigators expect to see a decrease in psychological distress, weight gain, and blood pressure in groups receiving the intervention at each level, with the greatest decreases in the outcomes observed in the group receiving both the individual- and employer-level interventions. Secondary outcomes include situational stress, coping style, health behaviors, perceived workplace support, health-related employment functioning and employment duration.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALImmediate Chronic Disease Prevention Program (CDPP)The CDPP is an adaptation of the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP). It will take place over a 24 week period and involve online instruction and individualized lifestyle coaching sessions. The online classroom curriculum includes 8 modules: Goal setting, self-monitoring and problem solving (M1), Managing stress and negative thoughts (M2), Healthy eating (M3), Taking more steps (M4), Keeping alcohol in check (M5), Lifestyle change (M6), Taking charge of what (and who) is around you (M7), and Staying motivated (M8). The lifestyle coaches will meet in person and over the phone intermittently over the 24 week period (Weeks 2, 4, 6, 10, 12, 16, 24).
BEHAVIORALWorkplace Equity, Job and Health Supports Employer InterventionThe employer intervention combines implicit bias awareness training for supervisors of hired DSS-E clients, and regular, structured, interactions between supervisors and DSS-E hires.
BEHAVIORALDelayed, attenuated Chronic Disease Prevention Program (CDPP)Participants will have access to a delayed, attenuated online-only version of the CDPP at the time they complete the 12 month data collection. This version will provide all modules, self-monitoring options (including through use of a Fitbit contingent on the completion of the 12 month data collection) but will not include face-to-face or phone lifestyle coach sessions.

Timeline

Start date
2021-09-17
Primary completion
2025-11-30
Completion
2025-11-30
First posted
2021-03-25
Last updated
2025-12-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04815278. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.