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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06981182

EQUITA - A Feasibility Trial of a Faith-placed Intervention to Increase Screening Uptake in Black Adults

EQUITy in Black Adult Health (EQUITA) - a Randomised Feasibility Trial of a Co-produced and Faith-placed Intervention to Increase Uptake of Breast, Cervical, Bowel, and AAA Screening in the North East of England, Leeds and Scotland

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
300 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Sunderland · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
25 Years – 74 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this randomised feasibility trial is to examine feasibility and acceptability of a co-produced and faith-placed intervention to increase uptake of breast, cervical, bowel, and abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) screening among Black communities in the North East of England, Leeds and Scotland, United Kingdom (UK). Participants will be invited to attend a two-hour workshop at each of the three study sites and will be randomly assigned to either the intervention group or the control group. This 24-month feasibility study will inform the development of a full-scale randomised-controlled trial co-produced for Black people that uses culturally appropriate messages that support screening for early diagnosis in this underserved group.

Detailed description

Over 2.4 million Black, Black British, Black Caribbean or African people live in the UK Black community, where lower screening rates place them at a higher risk of death due to lack of early diagnosis and provision of effective early treatment. Population health screening is largely under-researched in Black communities in the UK. Few studies have been conducted focusing on Black people and national screening programmes. The EQUITA study builds on the IMCAN (Improving Muslim Women's CANcer Screening Uptake), and PROCAN-B ((Early diagnosis of PROstate CANcer for Black men) studies by using the same community-centred and participatory approach to apply a whole-community, multi-screening strategy to encourage uptake of breast, bowel, cervical, and AAA screening among Black communities. The intervention will retain the core elements of the participatory approach, including the Community Recruitment Leads on the research team, Public Involvement and Community Engagement (PICE) group for co-production, trained peer-facilitators, and faith-based engagement. The structured workshop format, which has demonstrated feasibility and acceptability in previous studies, will be tailored in collaboration with Black communities to ensure cultural relevance. The study consists of six objectives with aligned work packages: 1. Can the existing intervention be adapted in partnership with a PICE group to improve engagement with breast, cervical, bowel, and AAA screening programmes in the Black community? 2. Can a two-arm cluster-randomised feasibility trial of the peer-led intervention be delivered in three sites: Leeds, North East of England and Scotland? 3. What are the perspectives of participants, peer facilitators, and key stakeholders on intervention and trial methodology, acceptability, and intervention implementation? 4. What is the feasibility trial's performance on key parameters and predefined progression criteria? 5. Is it feasible to conduct an economic evaluation to assess the cost-effectiveness of the intervention? 6. What are effective data dissemination strategies, and can the next phase be prepared by designing a study protocol for a definitive trial and logic model for implementation? This feasibility trial will involve delivering a 2-hour workshop to 300 Black people (females aged 25-74 and males 50-74) in churches in Scotland, North East of England, and Leeds, who are either not or partially up to date with the screening they are eligible for. Participants will be randomly allocated to either the intervention or control group at each site. A process evaluation, including focus groups and stakeholder interviews, will guide modifications to the trial and intervention.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERFaith-placed intervention to promote breast, cervical, bowel, and AAA screening uptake in Black communities.The intervention includes a two-hour workshop, delivered in person to the entire congregation, that aims to promote the uptake of breast, cervical, bowel, and AAA screening among Black communities in the North East of England, Leeds and Scotland. However, we will only include effectiveness data (i.e., surveys and screening uptake) from those who meet the study eligibility criteria. The intervention will be a peer-led, multidimensional community workshop. It will incorporate multiple components that tackle barriers to screening and that are present in the existing IMCAN and PROCAN-B interventions, if the PICE group believe these are helpful, such as health education about breast, cervical, bowel and AAA screening delivered by a healthcare provider with an opportunity to ask questions, personal testimonials through survivors' stories, as well as members of the community discussing experiences of screening, and utilising community and peer support and religious leaders.

Timeline

Start date
2025-09-01
Primary completion
2027-02-28
Completion
2027-02-28
First posted
2025-05-20
Last updated
2025-05-20

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06981182. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.