Whole-of-Community Youth Population Physical Activity
- Conditions
- Physical Activity
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Standard PracticeBehavioral: Wellness Landscape Intervention
- Registration Number
- NCT03380143
- Lead Sponsor
- University of Nebraska
- Brief Summary
This study will evaluate the impact of a whole-of-community multi-level adaptive systems intervention on implementation of community change and youth population physical activity. Building on local health department partnerships, the investigators will conduct a two-wave staggered-start community randomized trial with four volunteer rural communities (each having nested school, after-school, scouting/4-H club, youth sport organizations) randomly assigned to intervention or standard public health practice.
- Detailed Description
The underlying conditions where youth live are associated with population health outcomes, with rural communities facing under-studied challenges. Youth physical activity (PA), a key risk factor linked to later cancer occurrence, is an outcome of community conditions. The proposed work will address a critical public health need by evaluating the impact of a whole-of-community multi-level adaptive systems intervention on implementation of community change and youth population PA. The intervention, Wellscapes, is based on a hierarchical patch dynamics paradigm, given that communities are "wellness landscapes" of spatially heterogeneous geographic areas, characterized by a patchwork of interacting organization and activity settings. The intervention will establish a multi-level system infrastructure (Community Hub, Organization Wellness Teams, Activity Setting/Leaders) and provide training and support for population health quality improvement cycle processes targeting two evidence-based practices (EBPs): (1) stacking time segments of PA episodes within an organization's daily routine, and (2) improving the quality of PA episodes (% time in PA). The omnibus hypothesis is that intervention communities (plus organizations and leaders nested within) will have synergy and capacity to implement EBPs, adapting to continuously changing local system drivers to create a whole-of-community ecosystem of diverse and equitable youth PA opportunities. Building on local health department partnerships, the investigators will conduct a two-wave staggered-start community randomized trial with four volunteer rural communities (each having nested school, after-school, scouting/4-H club, youth sport organizations) randomly assigned to intervention or standard public health practice. For baseline and intervention years, one day per month in the fall (3 days) and spring (3 days), organization activity settings (e.g., classrooms, teams) that house 480 children in 3rd through 6th grades will be assessed, resulting in observed community condition data, PA accelerometer data, and setting reach data (children % attendance by gender, ethnicity, free/reduced lunch status, and grade). The investigators will also obtain estimates of population level PA with the use of the calibrated Youth Activity Profile, as well as community system qualitative data. The specific aims are to: (1) Determine the impact of the intervention on multi-level community system outcomes; and (2) Determine the implementation system drivers of multi-level youth population PA. The investigators will use "big data" multi- level modeling methods for this effectiveness-implementation hybrid design, because there is a dual focus on testing an implementation strategy while simultaneously evaluating youth population PA impact. The research is significant because it evaluates a method for improving population health, theory-based systems, and behavior change processes in low-resource rural communities. The proposed research is novel because the adaptive patch dynamics approach builds capacity for both equitable collaboration and EBPs implementation across multiple local systems that are individually and collectively, dynamic and unpredictable.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 697
- Community located in rural micropolitan area
- Community is a one high school town
- Organization is a school district
- Organization is a after school program
- Organization is a youth club system
- Organization is a youth sport delivery system
- Leaders of settings in school, after-school, club, and youth sport
- 3rd through 6th grade settings and children within
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Standard Practice Standard Practice The standard collective impact public health practice intervention will establish a multi-level system infrastructure and provide training on community development. Wellscapes Intervention Wellness Landscape Intervention The wellness landscape intervention (Wellscapes) will establish a multi-level system infrastructure (Community Hub, Organization Wellness Teams, Activity Setting/Leaders) and provide training and support for population health quality improvement cycle processes targeting two evidence-based practices (EBPs): (1) stacking time segments of PA episodes within an organization's daily routine, and (2) improving the quality of PA episodes (% time in PA).
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in frequency of implemented episode sessions of physical activity assessed by observation Baseline, 12 months Average of observed frequency of implemented physical activity episodes in school class, after-school class, youth club meeting, and youth sport practices
Change in minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity assessed by accelerometer Baseline, 12 months Average of school class, after-school class, youth club meeting, and youth sport practice physical activity
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change in minutes of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity assessed by self-report Baseline, 12 months Youth Physical Activity Profile
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University of Nebraska Medical Center
πΊπΈOmaha, Nebraska, United States