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Clinical Trial Summary

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is responsible for 1 in 4 deaths in the US annually. Nutrition is an important part of prevention and management of CVD and other chronic diseases, but only about 25% of patients with a chronic disease diagnosis (and about 12% of patients without a chronic disease) receive nutrition counseling from their physician. The investigators plan to validate a diet questionnaire in preparation for the creation of a diet assessment/ intervention tool to increase rates of nutrition intervention in medical care. The aim of this project is to test whether the developed questionnaire accurately identifies individuals at high nutritional risk compared to the Healthy Eating Index- 2015 (HEI-2015) determined by a validated questionnaire.


Clinical Trial Description

Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the US. The risk of heart disease increases with diabetes, overweight/obesity and unhealthy lifestyle behaviors. Despite the well recognized benefits of a healthy lifestyle in reducing heart disease risk, nutrition is not a part of routine medical care. Only about 25% of patients with a chronic disease, such as CVD (and only about 12% of those without a chronic disease), receive nutrition education from their doctor. Doctors often report a lack of confidence in providing nutrition education, and a lack of time in the office visit. Doctors need resources to assess diet and discuss nutrition with patients. This research aims to provide doctors with a diet assessment/ intervention tool to improve rates of nutrition intervention in medical care. There are few nutrition assessment tools appropriate for use in a medical office visit. The investigators have created a 9-item questionnaire that doctors can use to quickly assess diet in the office visit and plan test to it ensure that it measures diet accurately. In this study, the investigators will test the new questionnaire against an established, validated tool called a food frequency questionnaire. The investigators will also create talking points that physicians can use to help their patients make healthy dietary changes. In the future, the investigators will create a cell phone app based on the questionnaire that can be accessed quickly in an office visit. The app will provide a risk score and personalized talking points that can be discussed with the patient or e-mailed to them directly. An increase of just 1 serving of fruit per day (1 small apple, 1 cup of berries, 1 orange) could save over 1 million lives per year and reduce heart disease risk dramatically. This project could help to improve nutrition counseling by physicians during office visits, and can be expected to reduce heart disease rates and increase quality of life for those living with heart disease. This is important not only because of the statistics above, but also because when physicians do discuss healthy lifestyle changes with their patients, patients are more likely to make changes and improve their cardiovascular health. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03805373
Study type Observational
Source Penn State University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date January 1, 2019
Completion date December 31, 2020

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