Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06699589

Old School Hip Hop: Parent Follow-Up & Spanish Speakers Inclusion

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
278 (actual)
Sponsor
Columbia University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

These are the exploratory aims of the original trial cohort study "Old School Hip Hop RCT (AAAR5473)," which recruited 783 parents. 1. Continued follow-up of these families to learn more about the durability of the program through similar assessments to those used during the pre-specified 3-month initial study timeframe - aiming to understand participant knowledge and personal experiences with family members or friends affected by Alzheimer's Disease (AD). 2. Further examining the degree of comfort with dementia, as measured by a simplified version of the Dementia Attitudes Scale (DAS) focused on observable behaviors in children by their parents - aiming to understand the extent of stigmatization of dementia in communities served by this program, and if the trial impacted evidence of stigma. 3. Enrolling up to 75 parents who primarily spoke Spanish who were originally contacted in the RCT but were not eligible for completion of the original round of surveys given that all study materials were in English. This approach aims to better understand the impact of the program and Alzheimer disease on these families. Hypothesis 1: For the delayed follow-up with parents, the investigator anticipates that those with high dementia literacy or the largest dementia literacy improvement would sustain knowledge over 15-month period. Hypothesis 2: Children who received the intervention arm of the trial, who also have regular contact with a close friend or family member with dementia, will demonstrate positive dementia attitudes relative to students in the control arm. Hypothesis 3: Semi-structured interviews with Spanish speaking families will help program capacity to better serve the population and improve involvement in AD care and research.

Detailed description

The goal of the R01 study is to educate children and thereby parents/guardians on health education content through live educators, music, and videos. The study curriculum focuses on healthy aging vs Dementia/Alzheimer's Disease (AD), nutrition, and overall health. The investigator wishes to learn if children are able to absorb these health topics and share what they learn with their parents/guardians. That part of the program has been completed with students. This non-R01 portion of the study is designed to look at the long-term effect of the program, how it may have affected Spanish speaking families that were not approached during the first portion.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALOld SCHOOL Hip-Hop (Dementia Education)A school-based intervention called "Old S.C.H.O.O.L. Hip-Hop" (OSHH) or Seniors Can Have Optimal aging and Ongoing Longevity, to educate 4th and 5th grade students (ages 9-11y) about key dementia signs and symptoms, basic pathophysiology of Alzheimer disease, and the importance of early recognition, care-seeking behavior, and preventative measures (lifelong healthy lifestyle decisions). The intervention is delivered in a classroom or school auditorium setting, using an innovative, modular, multimedia program and home-based activities, to increase parental and family dementia literacy.
BEHAVIORALMy Plate (Nutrition Education)The program selected for the control arm, "My Plate," will address nutrition, physical activity, and obesity education. This program was selected because nutrition, physical activity, and wellness programs are now being incorporated into New York City public school curriculums as part of a legislative directive. Trained facilitators will conduct "My Plate" as an entry point for the USDA's My Plate nutrition program. Students will learn about My Plate across the 3-day one-hour-a-day program.

Timeline

Start date
2019-09-11
Primary completion
2025-03-04
Completion
2025-03-04
First posted
2024-11-21
Last updated
2025-06-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06699589. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.