Hypertension Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Beyond the Fork on Chronic Disease Self-management: a Pilot RCT
Dietary management is an integral aspect of self care for many chronic diseases. Craving Change™ is a standard program already offered at many Family Health Teams (FHT) to patients interested in being more mindful of their food choices. The program helps patients understand why they have difficulty with modifying behaviours associated with diet, addresses the impact of emotion on eating behaviour and provides affect regulation strategies. Existing literature shows that emotion has a strong effect on food choice and that emotion regulation can lead to improvements in food choice. Craving Change™, however, is currently not selectively offered at FHTs to patients deemed to be at higher risk of cardiovascular disease and has not been evaluated in that context. For this study, we propose to 1) Selectively target patients at higher cardiometabolic risk; and 2) Evaluate an effect of the program (as modified to address chronic diseases) through a pilot Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT). If found to be effective, the modified Craving Change™ program, called "Beyond the Fork: A health-centred approach to managing chronic disease", could be broadly implemented within Family Health Teams.
This study is specifically focusing on Diabetes Mellitus Type 2 and Hypertension as these are
chronic conditions in which dietary management is not only an integral part of managing the
condition, but can also be a major factor in poor outcomes. Many of the current approaches
and interventions used for treating these conditions provide patients with information about
"what" eating behaviours to change and "how" to change them, such as through DEP (Diabetes
Education Program) and CDSM (Chronic Disease Self-Management, aka Stanford).
The new intervention proposed in this study will be primarily based on material from the
Craving Change™ program; the focus of which is to provide patients with an understanding of
"why" it is difficult to change problematic eating behaviours. The new information that will
be added is specific to chronic disease management. The original Craving Change™ program
provides patients with information about how the environment, the physical body and emotional
reactions can contribute to problematic eating behaviours thus increasing difficulty in
changing those behaviours. The Craving Change™ program also provides patients with tools for
overcoming the identified obstacles from the environment, physical body and emotional
reactions in order to facilitate behaviour change. Patients who have a diagnosis of Diabetes
Mellitus Type 2 and/or Hypertension and who are poorly controlled, are often required to make
dietary changes to improve those conditions and often struggle to make the necessary dietary
behaviour changes. By providing these patients with a behavioural intervention that uses the
main components of the Craving Change™ program along with additional information specific to
chronic disease management, the overall aim is to help patients improve control over the
chronic condition with which they have been diagnosed.
As this is a feasibility study, the main goal is to determine if patients who are diagnosed
with chronic disease(s) can be recruited successfully, stay in the program and experience a
change in their perceptions of eating behaviours as a result of learning various strategies
offered in the program. Specifically, this study is focusing on whether the strategies
learned improve emotion regulation, which in turn could facilitate behaviour change. Our
primary outcome measure is the EEQ ("Emotional Eater Questionnaire"); which is a validated 10
item questionnaire measuring the degree of interaction between emotion and food choice.
This study is a Randomized Control Trial. The setting is 3 Family Health Teams in the Greater
Toronto Area. Eligibility criteria includes rostered status to the Family Health Team, no
previous participation in a program using Craving Change™, diagnosis of Diabetes Mellitus
Type 2 and/or Hypertension, and 2 of 3 high A1c / BP / LDL. Patients are identified using
Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) and those patients meeting criteria are sent an EEQ via
mail. Patients consenting to participation are invited to intake at which blood pressure
(BP), height/weight/waist circumference (ht/wt/wc) is measured and patients are randomized to
immediate participation in the program or to wait list control. After 6 weeks EEQ is
re-administered, and BP, ht/wt/wc is measured again.
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