Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04922164

Using Cueing Interventions to Promote Breastfeeding

Using Cueing Interventions to Bridge Intention-behaviour Gaps: an Longitudinal Experimental Study on Promoting Breastfeeding

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
252 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Hong Kong · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Background: Interventions focusing on promoting good behavioural intentions were found to only have small-to-moderate effect sizes on changing the actual behaviours. Self-regulation plays an important role to maintain individual attentions to the distant benefits of healthy behaviours and resist to proximal tempting cues from unhealthy behaviours, and thereby facilitate the translation of good intention into actual behaviours. However, self-regulation resources are limited and can be depleted in certain contexts. Providing environmental cues relevant to the desirable behaviours can activate the nonconscious process and lead to behavioural change without conscious awareness, the underlying mechanism of cueing interventions. Aims: To test the effectiveness of using two types of cues, social normative and goal-related cues, to activate the nonconscious process for facilitating the translation of intentions into actual behaviours. We hypothesize that (1) cueing interventions will be more effective than will conventional education-based interventions (providing factual information about health benefits) be for changing behaviours; (2) cueing interventions are more effective for participants who have a tendency to use an intuitive mode in information processing; and (3) goal priming is more effective for participants with stronger motivation to pursue the goal of sustaining breastfeeding. Subject and study design: The hypotheses will be tested in the behavioural context of breastfeeding among first-time mothers because: first, primiparous women may have less self-regulation resources due to high cognitive demand for postpartum adjustment during motherhood transition; and second, while breastfeeding intention and initiation were high, maintaining breastfeeding for the first six months postpartum was generally low in Hong Kong, indicating a substantial intention-behaviour gap. We propose to recruit 600 primiparous women. Baseline assessments will be conducted face-to-face using a standardized questionnaire. Participants will be randomly allocated to the control group (receive education-based messages about the health benefit of breastfeeding) or one of the two intervention groups (receive either social normative cues or goal-related cues related to breastfeeding). All messages will be delivered through smartphone on a daily basis over 16 weeks postpartum.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCue interventionAround 30 pieces of narrative information about how a mother behaves in specific decision context will be derived from our qualitative study to construct social normative cues. For goal-related cues, words relating to each category of breastfeeding-related values, benefits and goals will be identified and used to construct the messages (e.g. "attractive body shape", "smart baby", "natural", "strong immunity" and etc.). Each goal-priming message will be presented with brief priming words and a picture of an image of the desirable goal.

Timeline

Start date
2021-07-26
Primary completion
2023-02-06
Completion
2023-02-06
First posted
2021-06-10
Last updated
2024-01-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04922164. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Using Cueing Interventions to Promote Breastfeeding (NCT04922164) · Clinical Trials Directory