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Effects of an Online Training Program for Physiotherapists About Weight Management for People With Osteoarthritis

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Osteoarthritis
Overweight and Obesity
Interventions
Other: Online training program in weight management for osteoarthritis
Registration Number
NCT04574804
Lead Sponsor
University of Melbourne
Brief Summary

A randomized controlled trial for which the primary objective is to evaluate the effects of an online training program on physiotherapist's self-reported confidence in knowledge about weight management for people with osteoarthritis. 80 physiotherapists will be recruited into the study and randomized to one of two arms a) online training program (access to training program for 6 weeks) or b) control group (no access to online training program during the study). Questionnaires will be completed by all participants at baseline, and again at the end of the 6 week intervention period. A biostatistician will analyse blinded, de-identified data.

Detailed Description

The Centre for Health Exercise and Sports Medicine at the University of Melbourne have developed a 6-module online training program designed to up-skill physiotherapists in weight management for osteoarthritis patients. This is a randomised controlled trial evaluating the effectiveness of the training program on physiotherapist's confidence in weight management for osteoarthritis patients. After providing informed consent and baseline data, physiotherapists will be randomized to either a) an online training program or b) control group. Those randomized to the online training group will be provided access to the a 6-module weight management training program and have six weeks to complete all the modules. Those randomized to the control group will receive no intervention. At baseline and six weeks, primary and secondary outcome measures will be completed in both groups.

The research question is: What are the effects of an online training program designed to up-skill physiotherapists in weight management for people with osteoarthritis? The primary objective is to evaluate the effects of an online training program on physiotherapist's self-reported confidence in knowledge about weight management for people with osteoarthritis.

80 participants will be recruited and randomization into the two study groups. To detect an effect size of 0.8 with 80% power and two sided significance level of 5%, 26 participants are required per group. Assuming a 35% loss to follow up, this will increase the same size to 40 per group (80 in total). The study will be conducted through The University of Melbourne. Participants will be able to access the training remotely in their own time and access all outcome measures online.

A biostatistician will analyse blinded, de-identified data. Analyses will be conducted with participants in assigned groups, with multiple imputation to account for missing data if required. Changes in self-reported confidence scores (primary outcome) will be compared between groups at 6 weeks using linear regression (with group as a factor) adjusting for baseline scores and the stratifying variables. Similar analyses will be conducted for secondary outcomes measured at baseline and 6 weeks. Process measures will be described in terms of mean (SD)/median (IQ range) or number (frequency). Standard diagnostic plots will be used to verify model assumptions.

If an imbalance is noted between groups for relevant baseline characteristics, sensitivity analyses will be conducted including these characteristics as covariates in the models assessing treatment effects.

The biostatistician will also conduct planned exploratory analyses to investigate potential moderators that could influence the effect of the training at 6 weeks. Pre-identified potential moderators include practice location (predominantly private vs predominantly public), baseline self rated confidence in weight management and years of clinical experience. To assess the moderation of the effect of randomised treatment group by the binary potential moderator (practice location), an interaction term between randomised group and the potential moderator, as well as terms for the randomised group and the potential moderator, will be included in the outcome regression model. To assess the moderation of the effect of randomised treatment group by continuous potential moderators (self rated confidence in weight management and years of clinical experience), the multivariable fractional polynomial interaction approach will be applied. This approach allows for nonlinear functional forms of the continuous potential moderator to be included in the regression model for outcomes, with the potential for separate nonlinear functional forms in each treatment group.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
80
Inclusion Criteria
  • Currently registered with the Australian Health Practitioner Registry
  • Have access to a computer with internet connection
  • Willing to commit to completion of an 8-10 hour online training module if randomized to the intervention group
  • Willing to refrain from participating in any weight management professional development activity external to the study for six weeks of intervention
  • Able to give informed consent and to commit and participate fully in the assessment and evaluation procedures over the six week period.
Exclusion Criteria
  • n/a

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
online training programOnline training program in weight management for osteoarthritisonline training program Participants receive access to online training program consisting of 6 e-learning modules on topics of weight management in osteoarthritis, which they will be instructed to and encourage to complete over the 6 intervention period.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-reported confidence in knowledge about weight management for patients with osteoarthritisChange from baseline at 6 weeks post randomization

Measured using an expert-developed, customized self-reported questionnaire exploring physiotherapists' perceived confidence in knowledge about weight management in osteoarthritis. Total score out of 70 possible points calculated from the responses to 14 Likert Scale (1-5) questions where higher values indicate higher confidence and lower values lower confidence in knowledge

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-reported confidence in clinical skills for weight management for patients with osteoarthritisChange from baseline at 6 weeks post randomization

Measured using an expert-developed, customized self-reported questionnaire exploring physiotherapists' perceived confidence in clinical skills for weight management in osteoarthritis. Total score out of 45 possible points calculated from the responses to 9 Likert Scale (1-5) questions where higher values indicate higher confidence and lower values lower confidence in clinical skills.

Self-perceived competence in nutrition care to patients with chronic diseaseChange from baseline at 6 weeks post randomization

Measured using the NUTCOMP Questionnaire, a validated six section questionnaire (four sections scored, two unscored) developed to explore health care professional's perceived competence of the provision of nutrition care. Total score out of 175 possible points calculated from the responses to the Likert Scale (1-5) for each of the 35 questions, where higher values indicate higher confidence and lower values, lower confidence.

Weight stigmatized attitudesChange from baseline at 6 weeks post randomization

Measured by the Anti-Fat Attitudes questionnaire which comprises 13 statements about beliefs about weight (categorized under Dislike, Fear and Willpower) which respondents answer on a 10 point 0-9 Likert type scale, where 0 = very strongly disagree and 9 = very strongly agree. Total score calculated by response to each statement out of eight. The 3 subscales (dislike, fear and willpower) will also be reported.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Melbourne

🇦🇺

Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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