Chronic Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
ACCELERATION: An Activity,Smoking Cessation, Healthy Eating and Alcohol Intervention Program With Motivational Supports Aimed at Chronic Disease Prevention
The ACCELERATION (ACtivity, smoking Cessation, healthy Eating and aLcohol Education, inteRvention, and motivATION) Program is a collaborative project in cancer and chronic disease prevention that has been designed by and will be delivered amongst cardiopulmonary rehabilitation and prevention programs and cancer centres in Ontario (ON), British Columbia (BC), Quebec (QC) and Nova Scotia (NS). This project is being funded by the Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Health Canada and Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and in the amount of $2.4M over a 3 year period (October 2013 - September 2016). The ACCELERATION Program is a 12 week structured model of behavioural interventions and education around self-management and prevention that aims to access readily available and referable people for primary prevention intervention.This program aligns with current provincial, national and international chronic disease prevention and management strategies. The goal of the ACCELERATION program is to measurably and effectively change the risk factors and health behaviours known to impact cancer and other chronic diseases. Specifically we will aim to increase physical activity, reduce smoking, encourage healthy eating, and moderate alcohol consumption in about 3,000 participants across Canada over 3 years.
Chronic diseases including cancer, cardiovascular disease, lung conditions and diabetes are
the leading cause of mortality and morbidity in Canada and worldwide. These chronic
conditions share common modifiable risk factors including physical inactivity, suboptimal
nutrition, smoking and excessive alcohol intake. Cardiac rehabilitation centres in this
Coalition have been providing primary and secondary prevention services for many years
focused on these behavioural risks, and many of our participants with heart disease also
have co-morbidities including cancer, diabetes and lung disease. Co-morbidities are a
clinical reality, and we no longer deal with diseases singularly. Today, our client
population is more diverse than ever and fiscal constraints call for the pooling of
prevention resources to simultaneously address a range of chronic diseases impacted by
common risk factors.
Extending our reach to populations at risk of cancer and other chronic diseases, populations
which are readily available and referable In Ontario, UHN/Toronto Rehab has a cancer program
for women who have survived breast cancer as well as women undergoing cancer treatment.
Discussions with Princess Margaret Hospital point to opportunities to extend programming to
more cancer patients and people at risk of cancer. The ELLICSR arm of Princess Margaret
Hospital, which focuses on helping survivors, has expressed interest in collaborating to
reach family and friends of cancer survivors, for primary prevention. Likewise, the Odette
Cancer Centre at Sunnybrook Hospital sees over 900 new women every year who are referred due
to a family history of breast cancer. They have expressed to us that they can identify and
will refer women at high risk of developing breast cancer into our proposed primary
prevention program. Similarly, in Quebec, L'Hôpital du Sacré-Cœur de Montréal has one of the
nation's highest rated lung cancer groups. Our Quebec partner, Centre de réadaptation
cardio-respiratoire Jean-Jacques-Gauthier (CRJJG) has strong ties to this program. With
funding, they will be able to reach and deliver prevention programmes to the family and
friends of their lung cancer clients, an opportunity that exists because family and friends
tend to be more engaged and open to the possibility of lifestyle change.
This is why we have partnered with these cancer centres in this Coalition: to formalize our
existing partnerships and focus our resources on the population at risk of cancer that is
readily available and referable for primary prevention.
The links that our Coalition partners have with primary care hold opportunities not yet
seized. In Ontario, the Department of Family and Community Medicine at Sunnybrook has many
patients at risk for, or with, multiple chronic diseases.
The opportunity that exists to reach pregnant women with obesity-related risks is one that
could be seized Canada-wide. The unfortunate reality is that obesity complicates about 50%
of pregnancies today.
The opportunity, and need, to impact a person's family and social circle Our program concept
is founded on the idea that 'you really need to get the whole family' to sustain the
long-term impact of prevention and change in behaviour. We know there is evidence that
family/social support can help. A systematic review on childhood obesity identified
promising strategies that included parent support and home activities that encourage
children to be more active, eat more nutritious foods and spend less time in screen-based
activities (Waters et al, 2011).
As Lead Agency, the UHN/Toronto Rehab already runs a successful Cardiac Rehab @ Home program
which is a six-month program that sees approximately 120 clients per year. The average
client lives approximately 200kms away from the urban area, is younger, and more likely to
be working, compared to on-site clients. An evaluation has shown that the program is
effective with similar outcomes as an on-site program: clients made the same gains in
cardiovascular fitness and were just as likely to adhere to the program. The study also
showed that such programs are more cost-effective than on-site programs for participants
living in remote areas (Scane et al, 2012).
Deepening and broadening our reach to selected at risk populations already connected to us.
Many of the core partners not only have links to their local communities but have years of
collaboration with the community on prevention. Notably, our BC partner, the BC
Cardiovascular Physiology & Rehabilitation Laboratory, has extensive primary prevention
experience having worked with more than 300,000 participants in the past 10 years on
community-based programs for children (school-based and out-of-school), workplace wellness
(e.g. police and firefighters) and population groups at risk for chronic disease.
Additionally, they have solid partnerships with Aboriginal communities throughout BC. Formal
partnerships have been forged with Aboriginal communities throughout BC including extensive
research in rural and remote communities.
Through the Coalition's work and history with the Aboriginal communities, and because they
know there is evidence that there are health benefits for Aboriginal peoples in
participating in a community-based physical activity intervention , the ACCELERATION program
could be delivered with relative ease to these communities in BC.
The Centre de réadaptation cardio-respiratoire Jean-Jacques-Gauthier (CRJJG) provides
prevention programming for patients with cardiovascular (heart disease and heart failure)
and respiratory disease (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma). One very unique
aspect is the ongoing asthma prevention work of this coalition member. This adult asthma
population are, on average, younger than most classical rehabilitation groups (ca. 40 years
old) and, whilst not having overt cancer or cardiovascular disease, do normally display
several risk factors, which provides a model of engaging and adapting the ACCELERATION
program to these kinds of populations.
Furthermore, the CRJJG is conveniently housed within the YMCA Cartierville. There is,
therefore, already a strong partnership with the YMCA. The proposed program will allow our
Quebec partner to deliver a prevention program to YMCA users with risk factors or a family
history of chronic diseases. In addition, the YMCA Cartierville has a unique partnership
with the local council where it provides free access to non-YMCA local community members,
thus allowing the ACCELERATION programme to be delivered to a very diverse cultural and
socio-economic community base.
Finally, the CRJJG has specific expertise in motivational interviewing (MI) , which is a
client-centred communication tool focusing on enhancing intrinsic motivation to change a
particular behaviour, and exploring and resolving ambivalence about behavior change (Lavoie
et al, 2012).
At the Eastern end of Canada, the province of Nova Scotia has one of the highest rates of
cardiovascular disease in the country with a prevalence of 6.4% (Heart and Stroke
Foundation, 2012). There is also an excess incidence and prevalence of lung, colorectal,
prostate, melanoma and breast cancer (Canadian Cancer Society). This is one reason we chose
to partner with Nova Scotia. Our partner runs the Community Cardiovascular Hearts in Motion
(CCHIM) program which is a community-based exercise and health education program. Referrals
are accepted from predominantly family doctors but also other specialists and allied health
professionals including physiotherapists, nurse practitioners and diabetes clinics. Patients
expand the complete vascular spectrum from primary care to all levels of secondary
prevention. There is also a Heart Health Clinic available to assist those individuals living
with more complicated and higher risk cardiac and pulmonary disease (tertiary). The
successes of this program are translatable to the ACCELERATION program that targets people
at risk of cancer and chronic diseases, as well as family and friends of people who have
suffered an acute event associated with a chronic disease.
Our Nova Scotia partner notes that there is strong representation of females in the primary
prevention arm of CCHIM and most of these are obese with diabetes. The planned Ontario
program with ante- and post-partum women at risk of obesity-related cancer is replicable for
the Nova Scotia female population, and we would seek to transfer knowledge and replicate the
program in Nova Scotia as well.
There is also an opportunity to reach the underserviced black population. Incidence rate
ratios for African Canadians relative to the general population of Nova Scotia were
significantly elevated for circulatory disease, diabetes and psychiatric disorders (Kisely
et al, 2008). Our Nova Scotia partner (CCHIM) sees opportunity in providing a virtual
program for this population. CCHIM is in present development of translational research to
move beyond the "bricks and mortar" to reach such patient populations who are in need of
such a program by virtue of risk or established disease but cannot, or will not, attend.
This will be run through the primary care physician and local health care teams (such as NP
clinics, addiction services, etc). It will allow for adaptation and implementation when the
patient is "ready" to engage (similar to smoking cessation as per the "Ottawa Model"). This
approach will be adapted to the present project in an effort to expand its exposure further
while evaluating the elements that are sustainable upon project completion.
In Ontario, the South Asian population is the largest visible minority group in Ontario, and
one with a higher prevalence of chronic diseases compared to other groups (Statistics
Canada, 2010; Fraser Health, 2013). They would benefit from a targeted program like
ACCELERATION that is customized for them, and made culturally appropriate to their beliefs,
values and customs.
Deepening prevention impact in workplaces Two of our key partners (BC and NS) have existing
partnerships with large employers.
In BC, our partner has a formal research relationship with the City of Richmond. They
evaluate the risk for chronic disease in approximately 200-300 City of Richmond workers each
year. The proposed program will allow the introduction of a workplace wellness program for
these workers. We estimate that with the awarding of this program that the current workplace
wellness program will expand meeting the needs of family and friends of city workers meeting
a direct mandate of the City of Richmond employers.
Our Nova Scotia partner will engage their Capital District Health Authority (CDHA)
workplace, drawing participants from a population of 10,000 employees. Having both a set
program and a virtualization of the program will offer a unique opportunity to address both
the benefits to at risk patients as well as the application of a program to the most common
yet possibly the most difficult workplace sector to access.
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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