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Interactive Mobile Messaging for Weight Control Among the Underserved

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Obesity
Interventions
Behavioral: Standard Care
Behavioral: TRIMM Intervention
Registration Number
NCT01814644
Lead Sponsor
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Brief Summary

This project will test the efficacy of the "TRIMM" (Tailored Rapid Interactive Mobile Messaging) program, a user-friendly, semi-individualized text-messaging intervention to facilitate lifestyle change and weight loss among obese African-American adults with or at risk for diabetes, in a pilot, controlled clinical trial.

The text-messaging intervention will be in addition to, and compared with traditional diet, behavior, and physical activity education. Tips will be designed to increase knowledge, skills, and motivation.

Detailed Description

Type-2 diabetes, and its most important risk factor, obesity, have become major strains on our nation's health care system. By 2050, one in three U.S. adults could have diabetes (Stobbe, 2010), and obesity currently contributes nearly 17% of U.S. medical costs (Cawley, 2010). Our nation's underserved urban minority populations disproportionately suffer from type-2 diabetes and obesity. African-Americans, for example, comprise 12% of the US population but 23% of the extremely obese (Livingston, 2004). To reduce diabetes, obesity must be addressed. Unfortunately, traditional obesity interventions are intrusive and costly.

This project will test the efficacy of the "TRIMM" (Tailored Rapid Interactive Mobile Messaging) program, a user-friendly, semi-individualized text-messaging intervention to facilitate lifestyle change and weight loss among obese African-American adults with or at risk for diabetes, in a pilot, controlled clinical trial.

The text-messaging intervention will be in addition to, and compared with traditional diet, behavior, and physical activity education. Tips will be designed to increase knowledge, skills, and motivation. Participants will have the option to receive spiritually-based messages, if desired.

166 overweight or obese men and women will be recruited from 10 Baltimore inner-city churches, and will be assigned to one of two, six-month lifestyle-change programs. Participants must be overweight, aged 21-65, and own a cell phone with text-messaging capability. To be eligible for the study, participants will need to first pass a health screening and meet other study criteria.

The McKesson Foundation is funding this study, which has a total of 5 visits, ranging from ½ hr. to 3 hrs. The active intervention will last 6 months, with a follow-up visit at month 12. The TRIMM Program will feature periodic, individualized text messages and feedback via the participant's mobile phone as well as periodic follow-up appointments. The traditional program will consist of traditional diet, behavior, and physical activity education.

Qualified participants will receive individualized weight-loss plans and monetary compensation for their time, effort, \& parking.

The long-term goal is to demonstrate, using a real-life setting, the potential superiority in efficacy of a specific mHealth application (text-messaging) for an underserved population at high risk of type-2 diabetes, compared to traditional, often more costly, and currently underutilized lifestyle-change interventions.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
124
Inclusion Criteria
  • Participants must be African-American,
  • aged 21-65,
  • have a phone with unlimited text/SMS capability,
  • a BMI > 27, and
  • be free from uncontrolled hypertension or other health or mental health condition that would make it inappropriate or unsafe for them to participate.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Following initial assessments, participants will be excluded if they are currently abusing alcohol/other substances, or
  • have an Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS-SR) score > 38 ('severe to very severe' depression).

Potential participants with uncontrolled hypertension (> 160 systolic or >95 diastolic), HbA1c > 8, or symptomatic CAD will be referred for medical clearance.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Standard CareStandard CareIndividual assessment Lifestyle counseling
TRIMM InterventionTRIMM InterventionIndividual assessment Lifestyle counseling Text messages
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Nutrition knowledge and beliefs.Change from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The 2008 Health and Diet Survey (HDS) will be used to assess participant's knowledge and attitudes, important components of the Health Belief Model. Questions cover nutrition knowledge and attitudes, grocery shopping, food label use, etc.

BiometricsChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 3, 6, and 12

Physical measures: weight, blood pressure, resting heart rate, height, and waist circumference

DepressionChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology: Self-Report. The DS-SR will be used to assess symptoms of depression (Rush, 1986, 1996). Its psychometric properties have been established in various populations (Rush 1996, 2000).

Diet qualityChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The 2005 Healthy Eating Index (HEI-2005) is a standardized tool that measures diet quality compared to MyPyramid.gov and the 2005 U.S. Dietary Guidelines. The 24-hour dietary recall is used to calculate the 12 components of the HEI-2005. HEI scores range from 0 to 100 (best) (USDA, 2000).

Self-Efficacy for ExerciseChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The Self-Efficacy for Exercise Scale (SEE) is a 13-item measure that focuses on self-efficacy and expectations related to the ability to continue to exercise in the face of barriers.

Self-Efficacy for Weight LossChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

Weight Efficacy Lifestyle Questionnaire (WEL). This will be used to assess self-efficacy for weight loss. The 20-item WEL consists of five situational factors: Negative Emotions, Availability, Social Pressure, Physical Discomfort, and Positive Activities.

Barriers to ChangeChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

These will be examined using a measure specifically developed for use in this study. Barriers assessed in the survey were identified via a focus group with the target population, existing literature on lifestyle change programs, and the investigators prior experience conducting health behavior change interventions.

Impact of Weight on Quality of LifeChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The Lite Version (IWQOL-Lite)is a widely used, well-validated, and reliable 31-item survey of obesity related quality of life (Kolotkin, 2002).

Exercise Benefits/BarriersChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

The Exercise Benefits/Barriers Scale (EBBS). This scale was developed to understand individuals' perceptions of the benefits of and barriers to participating in exercise.

Motivation/Readiness to ChangeChange from month 0 (baseline) to month 6

University of Rhode Island Change Assessment Scale. (URICA; McConnaughy, Prochaska, \& Velicer, 1983). This will be used to assess motivation and readiness to change; based on the Transtheoretical Model of health behavior change. Accurately assessing motivation or commitment to change is a crucial step in matching patients to appropriate interventions.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Process surveymonth 6

Participants will be given a survey assessing intervention's ease of use, satisfaction and desire to continue use at 6 months to obtain process evaluation measures.

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