Obesity, Pediatric Clinical Trial
Official title:
Project LiGHT (Living Green and Healthy for Teens): A Novel Weight Management Program That Emphasizes the Benefits of a Healthy Lifestyle
Verified date | June 2022 |
Source | University of British Columbia |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This study is the first of three sub-studies aimed at evaluating the outcomes of Living Green, Healthy for Teens (LiGHT v2.1), an app for 13 to 17 year -olds and their families that is intended to help them shift from an unhealthy lifestyle toward better health habits in three areas: physical activity, nutrition and sedentary behaviours. This first evaluation has the following aims to: 1) describe reach; 2) determine utilization/adherence to strategies implemented in the app and predictors of utilization/adherence; 3) assess change in knowledge and lifestyles behaviours associated with obesity as well as assess mediators of behaviour change. As this is a formative evaluation, it will prospectively follow 500 families for 4.5 months.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 500 |
Est. completion date | December 23, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | November 30, 2018 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 13 Years to 17 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Youth participants must be between the ages of 13 and 17 - Youth participants and at least one of their parents must be literate in English - Youth participants and at least one of their parents must be able to read at the grade 5 level or above - Parent participants must have primary custody of the child participant - Families must have a computer or mobile device and internet access at home Exclusion Criteria: - Youth participants must not have any health condition that restricts the amount or type of activity the participant can do - Youth participants must not have any health condition that severely restricts the types of food the participant can eat - Youth participants must not have a diagnosis of type I diabetes - Youth participants must not have any reason (including cognitive, psychological, or physical limitations) that preclude them from being able to spend 20-30 minutes using a computer program that is written at a 5th grade reading level |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | BC Children's Hospital Research Institute | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of British Columbia | Ayogo Health Inc., Childhood Obesity Foundation, Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada, Merck Canada Inc., Pacific Blue Cross, Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) |
Canada,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Functionality | Monthly satisfaction surveys will assess whether users like the program (e.g. was LiGHT fun, easy to use and intuitive, did it offer content to which they could relate and features they like) and whether they have suggestions for improvement | 4.5 months | |
Primary | Reach | Survey questions will assess socio-demographic characteristics of families and will be compared against those who were invited to participate in the study (from a web-based panel) and families who typically register for weight-management centres in Canada. | Baseline | |
Primary | Adherence | Web-analytic tools will track utilization of LiGHT components and all interactions with the program. Adherence will be calculated as cumulative number of feature-specific interactions per week (e.g., number of interactions with articles, number of interactions with social wall, etc.). | Ongoing for 4.5 months | |
Primary | Change in health behaviour knowledge | Survey questions (using a LiGHT-specific tool) will assess teens' knowledge of Canadian recommendations for healthy eating, physical activity, and sedentary behaviours. Knowledge will be reported as an aggregate knowledge score from 0 to 13 (a score of 0 indicates low knowledge and a score of 13 indicates high knowledge), as well as sub-score for each of the knowledge area (healthy eating, physical activity, and sedentary behaviours). | Baseline and 4.5 months | |
Primary | Change in physical activity behavior (teens) | Survey questions will assess teens' physical activity behaviours, and change in physical activity will be computed based on a composite physical activity score. Teen physical activity will be assessed using a modified version of the Physical Activity Questionnaire for Children (PAC-Q), and scored as average minutes per day of moderate-vigorous physical activity. | Baseline and 4.5 months | |
Primary | Change in physical activity behavior (parents) | Survey questions will assess parents' physical activity behaviours, and change in physical activity will be computed based on a composite physical activity score. Parent physical activity will be assessed using a modified version of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire Short Form (IPAQ-SF), and scored as average minutes per day of moderate-vigorous physical activity. | Baseline and 4.5 months | |
Primary | Change in sedentary behaviour | Survey questions will assess teens' and parents' recreational screen time use (using the Take Action survey), and will be reported as the number of self-reported hours of recreational screen time per day. | Baseline and 4.5 months | |
Primary | Change in dietary behaviour | Survey questions will assess teens' and parents' dietary behaviours, and be reported as average number of fruits and vegetables and sugar-sweetened beverages per day. | Baseline and 4.5 months | |
Secondary | Change in mediators of behaviour change | Survey questions will assess teens' self-efficacy and motivation in changing the health behaviours targeted by LiGHT | Baseline, 1 month, and 4.5 months |
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