Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05702346 |
Other study ID # |
PA20183 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
December 1, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
November 30, 2028 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2023 |
Source |
Boston University Charles River Campus |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The present study aims to test the efficacy of a multi-level telehealth intervention to
Enhance Physical Activity (EPA) in 300 low-income Black and Hispanic/Latino adults. EPA is
eight weeks with four weekly, hour-long parts: virtual group exercises, virtual group
discussions, individual PA participation, and individual phone check-ins. A control group
will receive health education. The specific aims are to: 1) test if physical activity
increases significantly more among participants assigned to EPA vs. wait-list controls and 2)
test if physical function improves significantly more among participants in EPA vs. controls.
An exploratory third aim will test mechanisms of change associated with EPA.
Description:
In the U.S., 77% of Black and 79% of Hispanic/Latino (HLs) adults do not meet physical
activity (PA) guidelines to engage in moderate to vigorous PA for 150 minutes each week
compared to 73% of White adults. Low PA leads to chronic conditions such as cardiovascular
disease, type 2 diabetes, and obesity that result in disability and premature death. For
Black and HL adults, low PA compounds predispositions to these conditions. Despite the urgent
need to increase PA among Black and HL adults, solutions to increase PA are not tailored to
this population. Poverty is more than double for Black (19.5%) and HLs (17%) compared to
non-HL White adults (8.2%) and meeting PA standards increases with income. Lack of access to
costly exercise facilities and living in unsafe neighborhoods contribute to low PA among
Black and HL adults. As an alternative to traditional approaches, virtual guidance (i.e.,
telehealth) is a feasible and effective way to overcome the lack of access to facilities and
PA participation in unsafe environments. The present study aims to test the efficacy of a
multi-level telehealth intervention to Enhance Physical Activity (EPA) in 300 low-income
Black and HLs. This full-scale, well-powered efficacy study builds on a Phase 1
pilot-controlled trial of EPA that showed high feasibility and acceptability in low-income
Black and HLs. EPA is eight weeks with four weekly, hour-long parts: virtual group exercises,
virtual group discussions, individual PA participation, and individual phone check-ins. Using
a socio-ecological model of behavior change, EPA addresses PA and physical function at both
intrapersonal (individual PA participation and individual phone check-ins) and interpersonal
(virtual group exercises and virtual group discussions) levels. A control group will receive
health education with the option to receive EPA later. All participants will attend four
visits: pre-test, post-test 1 after EPA, post-test 2 (6 months after post-test 1), and
post-test 3 (12 months after post-test 1). EPA is unique compared to other PA interventions
as it combines standard PA intervention components with factors vital for increasing PA in
Black and HLs while leveraging social connection: culturally relevant support, group
discussions targeting discrimination, a telehealth format accessible to low-income people,
and activities using everyday items or body weight to account for lack of equipment. The
specific aims are to: 1) test if PA increases significantly more among participants assigned
to EPA vs. wait-list controls and 2) test if physical function improves significantly more
among participants in EPA vs. controls. An exploratory aim is to test mechanisms of change
associated with EPA. Based on the sociocultural component of the National Institute on
Minority Health and Health Disparities Research Framework, we hypothesize that social
connection will mediate PA and physical function outcomes for those who receive the EPA
intervention. This research can elucidate behavioral mechanisms responsible for low PA in
low-income Black and HL adults and lead to scalable and sustainable multi-level interventions
to support increased PA for Black and HL communities.