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Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine- Acres Homes

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Elevated Body Mass Index
Diabetes
Interventions
Behavioral: Virtual Culinary Medicine
Registration Number
NCT06096506
Lead Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to to implement adapted virtual Culinary Medicine (CM) curriculum among target population, to assess if program participation improves participant dietary behaviors, nutrition knowledge, and cooking skills and behaviors above standard of care, to assess if program participation improves patient levels of HbA1c, Body Mass Index, Blood Pressure, HDL, LDL and Triglycerides above standard of care and to determine the feasibility and reproducibility of virtual synchronous CM classes.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
88
Inclusion Criteria
  • Receiving care at UT Physicians clinics
  • diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and elevated body mass index (>=25)
  • HbA1c labs and clinic-assessed weight completed within the last 3 months;
  • English speaking or Spanish speaking.
  • Can obtain groceries before each class (intervention group only)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patients without the technological support needed to participate (e.g., reliable internet and device - cell phone, tablet or laptop);
  • Patients with an uncontrolled impairment that interferes with ability to participate.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention clinicsVirtual Culinary MedicineParticipants will be recruited from those receiving care at University of Texas (UT) Physician Clinics serving the Acres Homes neighborhood in Houston
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in diastolic Blood Pressurebaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in Eating/cooking/using nutrition labels by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCM)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This consists of 10 items that are scored from 1( never) to 5( always) for a maximum score of 50, a higher number indicating better outcome

Change in Body Mass Indexbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in High-density lipoprotein (HDL)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in systolic Blood Pressurebaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in Barriers to Healthy Eating by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCM)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This consists of 4 items that are scored from 1( strongly agree) to 5( strongly disagree) for a maximum score of 20, a higher number indicating better outcome

Change in Diabetes Management by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCM)Baseline, post intervention (upto 10 weeks after baseline)

This consists of 18 items. The first 16 items that are scored from 1 \[Does not apply to me\] to 4 \[Applies to me very much\] and the remaining 2 items are dichotomous scored \[Yes=1\] to \[No=0\], for a maximum score of 68, with a higher number indicates a better diabetes self-management.

Change in low-density lipoprotein (LDL)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in fruit and vegetable consumption as assessed by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCMbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This is a 2 item questionnaire and is scored from 0(no servings per day ) to 5(4+ servings per day), maximum score of 10 a higher number indicating more consumption of fruit and vegetables

Change in Triglyceridebaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)
Change in perceived health as assessed by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCMbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This is a 1 item questionnaire and is scored from 1(excellent) to 6(poor) for a maximum score of 6, a higher number indicating better health

Change in whole grain consumption as assessed by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCMbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This is a 1 item questionnaire and is scored from 0(no servings per day ) to 5(4+ servings per day), maximum score of 5 a higher number indicating more consumption of whole grains

Change in typical food consumption behaviors as assessed by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCMbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This consists of 7 items that are scored from 1 \[Not at all\] to 5 \[More than once a day\] for a maximum score of 35, a higher number indicating better outcome.

Change in Perceived Barriers of Eating Fruits and Vegetables as assessed by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCMbaseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This consists of 13 items that are scored from 0( strongly agree) to 4( strongly disagree) for a maximum score of 52, a higher number indicating better outcome

Change in Self-efficacy in cooking food and meal planning by the Nourishing the Community Through Culinary Medicine survey (NCCM)baseline (within 90 days of starting the NCCM program), at program completion (within 90 days of NCCM program completion)

This consists of 5 items that are scored from 0( not at all sure) to 4( extremely sure ) for a maximum score of 20, a higher number indicating more self efficacy

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Houston, Texas, United States

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