Physical Activity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of a Shelter-Based Diet and Physical Activity Intervention for Homeless Adults: A Pilot Study
The proposed study will utilize a randomized controlled trial design to pilot-test a 4-week shelter-based diet and physical activity intervention in a sample of homeless adults residing in the transitional shelter at The Bridge Homeless Assistance Center in Dallas, TX (N = 50). Participants will be randomly assigned to a diet/physical activity intervention group (n = 25) or a paid assessment-only control group (n = 25). Three intervention strategies will be employed: 1) computer-tailored newsletters adapted from a program supported for use in other populations, 2) the distribution of fruit and vegetable snacks directly to individuals, and 3) the provision of pedometers and walking goals. Thus, the primary aim of the proposed study is to 1) evaluate the feasibility and effectiveness (relative to an assessment-only control group) of a shelter-based intervention designed to improve dietary intake and increase physical activity among homeless individuals. The main study outcomes will be average daily fruit and vegetable consumption and objective pedometer/ accelerometer assessment of physical activity (assessed weekly) over the 4-week study period, and at a follow-up assessment 4 weeks after the conclusion of the intervention. Secondary aims will focus on: 2) identifying intervention-related differences (relative to the control group) in indicators of physical health including blood pressure, weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, and other dietary variables (i.e., caloric intake, meals consumed outside of the shelter, daily fat and fiber intake) and 3) identifying psychosocial variables associated with dietary quality and physical activity.
Study Overview. The proposed study will take place at "The Bridge" homeless shelter in
Dallas, TX. The study intervention will use a randomized controlled trial design, and an
additional 50 transitional shelter residents will be recruited to participate in the proposed
8-week study (4-week intervention; 4-week post-intervention follow-up visit). Transitional
Shelter residents stay in "semi-private" rooms for an average of 5 months while staff works
to secure more permanent housing. Interested and eligible participants will be randomized to
either 1) a 4-week shelter-based diet or physical activity intervention, or 2) standard care
(paid assessment only). Participants will be asked to complete weekly assessments of diet,
physical activity, stress, readiness to change, and other relevant variables throughout the
4-week intervention period, in addition to a 4-week post-intervention follow-up. Participants
will be compensated with gift cards for each of 6 visits. Participants assigned to the
control group will receive tailored newsletters and pedometers with walking goals at the
final follow-up visit. Laptop and tablet computers equipped with Questionnaire Development
System software will be transported to the shelter for all intervention and assessment
sessions.
Intervention Components Education. A series of four computer-tailored newsletters will be
generated for each individual participant using TailorTool, a web-based program hosted and
maintained at the University of North Carolina (described below; see also www.chaicore).
Newsletter topics include healthy eating (especially the importance of fruit/vegetable
consumption), physical activity, and weight management. Using information collected at
baseline, newsletters will be tailored to individual participants based on demographic,
psychosocial, behavioral, and community resource information. The program will be adapted to
include graphics and testimonials relevant to the sheltered homeless population. Strategies
for healthy food selection and community resources available to shelter residents will be
provided.
The newsletters will include of a set of tailored "stories" in the following formats designed
to appeal to the homeless shelter population: Testimonials (tailored to gender) by residents
of the shelter who have made changes in weight and lifestyle. An advice column (tailored to
behavior-specific barriers), that uses a "Dear Abby" format in which an expert (e.g.,
dietician) answers questions tailored to participant-selected barriers. Behavioral feedback
(current behavior compared to recommendations) will be provided. Stage of change-based action
plan (tailored to stage of change, current behavior) will offer a specific set of steps that
are stage-matched to participant readiness to change related to each behavior. The importance
of social support (tailored to behavior-specific social support/network characteristics) will
be discussed by providing a targeted story about how social support (tailored to type of
support and person most helpful to give support) has helped someone make healthy changes. The
values section (tailored to participant-selected core values) discusses the
participant-selected values and suggests possible ways that these values may be related to
the target behavior. Community resources will provide information and tips tailored to the
shelter, such as group session information, healthful choices in the cafeteria (and other
common food sources), maximizing SNAP food benefits for optimal nutrition, good nutrition
with a limited income, walking groups, contact information, and community resources.
Participants assigned to standard care will receive the tailored newsletters after they
complete the final follow-up assessment.
TailorTool is a software tool created by the UNC CHAI (Communication for Health Applications
and Interventions) Core that enables the creation and delivery of tailored communications in
a dynamically generated pdf newsletter format. The tool generates intervention material such
as individual feedback on targeted behavior(s) and variables such as relevant demographics,
psychosocial factors, and barriers. Templates of various page lay-out possibilities allow
individualization of the look of the newsletters. Messages are drawn from a message library
of text files of varying lengths depending on the needs of the research study. Graphics can
be imported into the various template pages. Newsletters can vary in length and can be
personalized with names of participants. Following completion of an online survey the
newsletter(s) are created in a pdf format for reading, saving, and/or printing by the
participant. Each subsequent newsletter can be available immediately or timed for release to
fit the timeline of the intervention.
From a technical perspective, the web application for the automated web-to-print system is
programmed to run under a Windows operating system, using open-source software and a MS SQL
database. The core of the system is a server-side application, with the website consisting of
ASP pages (Active Server Pages), which interface with the application using XML. The backend
application is heavily database-driven with everything from survey questions and skip
patterns (i.e. which survey answers can cause later questions to be disabled, as described
above; the actual disabling takes place client-side, with dynamically-generated javascript
code) to the newsletter content and tailoring logic stored in, and thus configurable via, XML
files. Participants' survey-response data are stored in the database. The dynamic generation
of the print newsletters in pdf format is done within the application using a dynamic-link
library installed on the system.
Fruit/Vegetable Snacks. We will provide transitional shelter residents assigned to the
intervention group with two pieces of fruit and/or vegetables each weekday. We will offers
fruits/vegetables that are easy to distribute and do not require preparation other than
washing or packaging in a bag (e.g., apples, bananas, oranges, baby carrots, broccoli,
cauliflower). Foods will be purchased by study staff, stored at The Bridge in the cafeteria
refrigerator, and offered to participants assigned to the intervention group in the cafeteria
at specified times twice daily as mid-morning and mid-afternoon snacks. Note that because the
snacks will be offered between regular mealtimes, only intervention participants will be in
the cafeteria to receive the fruit/vegetable snacks. In addition, snacks will be consumed in
the cafeteria during specified snack times because the shelter does not allow food in other
areas of the building. Study staff will follow all relevant shelter food safety practices. It
is hypothesized that study participants will consume more fruit and vegetables and eat fewer
meals/snacks from fast food restaurants and convenience stores than individuals assigned to
the control group. This is a practical, simple, and direct approach to increasing
fruit/vegetable consumption, as shelter residents obtain most of their meals from the shelter
and offering snacks may discourage residents from seeking less healthful foods elsewhere.
Pedometers. Walking is a practical way to achieve physical activity recommendations among
individuals experiencing homelessness, as it does not require any specific equipment and may
be a common activity and means of transportation in this population. Pedometers are small and
inexpensive devices that measure steps walked per day. All study participants will be
provided with a New Lifestyles NL-1000 pedometer/ accelerometer, which measures steps,
distance, and activity minutes and is equipped with a 7-day memory and clock. Those randomly
assigned to the intervention will be instructed to aim for 10,000 steps per day, but to focus
on gradually increasing their steps each day (rather than achieving 10,000 steps right away)
if they are currently very sedentary. In addition, intervention participants will be provided
with information about the Back on My Feet program, which is offered at the Bridge shelter.
Program members meet for a group run/walk 3 times per week on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
mornings. Intervention participants will be instructed to wear their pedometer during waking
hours each day, and asked to return each week over a 4-week period (4 visits total) so that
study staff may record the daily step counts. We will additionally ask participants to return
for a 4-week post-intervention follow-up (we will remind participants to wear their pedometer
the week prior to the assessment). Individuals assigned to the control group will provided
with a pedometer and step goals after the final follow-up visit. All participants may keep
their pedometer after their participation in the study is completed. Note that intervention
and control group participants will be provided with accelerometers at the beginning of the
study to provide an objective measure of physical activity.
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