View clinical trials related to Health Behavior.
Filter by:The global SARS-CoV-2 pandemic that causes the severe respiratory illness COVID-19 is the worst health crisis that the United States has faced in a century. Although this highly contagious virus has infected millions of Americans already, the disease burdens are disproportionately born by historically underserved populations such as Latinx communities. This disparity is notable in Oregon, where the 13% of the population that is Latinx represents approximately 44% of COVID-19 cases. An urgent need exists to reach Oregon's Latinx community to prevent SARS-CoV-2 transmission. The overall goal of this study is to implement a Promotores de Salud intervention to increase the reach, access, uptake, and impact of testing in Latinx communities in Oregon. This project will fully integrate with the National institutes of Health (NIH) Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx) consortium and its Coordination and Data Collection Center (CDCC). With guidance and leadership from the study's Latinx Community and Scientific Advisory Board, 38 testing sites have been established to test the Promotores de Salud intervention. The investigators will test whether the Promotores de Salud intervention will increase testing rates and promote better health behaviors in communities over time. The investigators will test the intervention using a randomized control trial comparing the intervention to county outreach services as usual. Evaluation of the Promotores de Salud intervention held during a testing event (compared to distribution of a pamphlet only) will test whether culturally competent education results in greater use of strategies that reduce transmission of COVID-19 at the community and individual level. The investigators have designed a working group structure with teams focused on: Community Engagement, Molecular Biology, Data Science, and Implementation Science. These working groups are coordinated by an Administrative Hub and guided by the study's Latinx Community and Scientific Advisory Board. Over time, this project will help communities institutionalize optimal local testing frameworks supported by University of Oregon laboratory facilities for testing capacity, technical support for testing logistics, and collection of data on health behaviors, testing rates, and sustainability. The resulting structures and systems will be poised for future scale-up to other vulnerable communities and/or for other public health purposes (e.g., vaccination campaigns).
This study will be carried out in order to determine the e-health literacy levels of the students of the Department of Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation and to reveal whether the level of their education has an effect on e-health literacy. It is aimed to contribute to the literature with the objective, evidence-based results to be obtained from the study and to contribute to undergraduate education as a result of the differences between class levels.
The aim of this study is to identify the risk factors favoring the contagion of COVID-19 by studying the quarantine behavior and preventive measures in the Mexican population. As a secondary aim, the investigators sought to identify areas that need reinforcement, to help develop strategies for a successful plan to face an upcoming pandemic.
This mixed methods study evaluates the effectiveness and cost of a healthcare worker focused outreach intervention strategy versus community organization led outreach to explore contextual factors (individual, family, and community) affecting COVID-19 testing implementation outcomes and scalability.
Child marriage leads to pregnancy in adolescence, a root cause of both malnutrition and the intergenerational cycle of malnutrition. Two-thirds of Bangladeshi girls are married before 18 years, nearly half become pregnant before 19, and the rates of stunting and underweight are 26% and 36%, respectively. There are well-established risks of adolescent pregnancy for both mother (impaired growth and development due to nutrient reallocation for pregnancy and lactation), and infants (increased risk of low birth weight and small-for-gestational-age). Poor sexual and reproductive health (SRH), infant and young child feeding (IYCF), and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) knowledge could impair the nutritional and health status of the whole family, sparking intergenerational issues. The investigators propose to investigate the efficacy of a gender-transformative enhanced homestead food production (EHFP) program to prevent child marriage, and in turn, adolescent pregnancy-induced malnutrition among girls aged 13-15 years in a high-risk area for child marriage, Khulna Division, southern Bangladesh. The investigators will conduct a cluster-randomized controlled trial in which n=1200 girls in after-school Adolescent Clubs will participate in a 24-month program teaching women's empowerment through hands-on workshops. All participants (control and EHFP groups) will be exposed to SRH, WASH, and IYCF, while those in the EHFP group will also receive EFHP training and inputs intended to improve nutrient intake and provide an income source for the adolescent girls' family. Investigators hypothesize that girls in the EHFP group will have lower rates of marriage and pregnancy, and improved food security, dietary diversity, nutritional status, IYCF, WASH, and SRH knowledge/practices.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the feasibility of conducting a randomised controlled trial (RCT) comparing brief psychological intervention to help patients with Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD), reduce cardiovascular risk factors compared to control/treatment as usual in a vascular outpatient clinic. Trial feasibility was defined as the successful recruitment and retention of participants, adherence to the intervention, identification of barriers to the intervention and collection of clinical and quality of life outcome data. Qualitative data was collected to evaluate participant experience and the clinical impact of a supported self-management intervention delivered in a routine clinical setting.
Obesity is a multi-dimensional problem that has roots in infancy and tracks into adulthood. Obesity is represented disproportionately among children and families from low socioeconomic and minority backgrounds, particularly in rural areas that have limited access to food, activity, and health-related services. There is a need for culturally-tailored, effective interventions that can positively impact the environments (home, preschool, community) in which young children grow and develop their eating and activity behaviors. Developing family interventions, particularly for families with limited resources, requires improving caregivers' health literacy and home food/activity environments, and also requires tailoring to accommodate the realities of stressful and unpredictable family settings. The overall objective of this proposed HEROs Study (HEalthy EnviROnments Study) is to develop a companion, technology-based, interactive family intervention that will promote healthy lifestyles for young children in both Head Start and family settings.
The Purpose of this study is to investigate changes in alcohol consumption in the period leading up to the onset of pancreatitis and compare that to levels of drinking during asymptomatic periods.
The Danish healthcare system is universal and free of charge for Danish citizens, as all healthcare services are financed by general taxes. However, socioeconomic differences exist in access to healthcare services, treatment, and consequences of type 2-diabetes (T2D). Using a realistic evaluation approach, this study aimed to evaluate the implementation of a Danish peer support intervention, targeted on improving self-management and use of healthcare services among socially vulnerable people with type 2-diabetes ("peers"). The study focused on the mechanisms generating the intended outcomes. Further, how contextual factors in peers' everyday life facilitated or hindered the mechanisms to operate. The study design is a multi-method case study (n=9). Data include qualitative semi-structured interviews with four key groups of informants (peer, peer supporter, project manager, and a diabetes nurse). Each type of informant per case was interviewed (n=25) to obtain different perspectives of how the peers' interacted, and benefited from the intervention. All interviews were completed immediately after the after the 6-month intervention. Further, a quantitative survey was conducted among peers at baseline (N=9) and follow-up (N=9) to obtain information about how peers' individual contextual factors, such as their sociodemographic characteristics, co-morbidity, diabetes complications, social relations, and other life events influenced how they perceived and interacted in the intervention. Further, to measure improvements in their diabetes-self management (DSM) and use of healthcare services (outcomes). Questions from the Danish National Health Survey were used to measure DSM: (eating habits, physical activity,and medication intake). Use of healthcare services was measured by the number of times (during a 12-month period) the peers' attended diabetes controls at the GP; food therapist, and ophthalmologist or had other form of contacts with relevant health care services. All data were collected between February 2018 and April 2020. Hypothesis: 6-month individual face-to-face peer support provided by non-professional persons with T2D can improve self-management and use of healthcare services among socially vulnerable people with T2D if contextual factors such as peers' sociodemographic characteristics, health condition, and social relations facilitate their engagement in the intervention. Potential mechanisms that generate the expected outcomes might be: peers' motivation, trust, perceived beliefs and needs; and experience of being supported by the peer supporters.
The Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial (cRCT) portion of the study will focus on evaluating the use of information, marketing, and incentives to shape student travel behavior to campus through the three channels identified in Ajzen's (1991) framework.