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Engaging African American Older Adults With Arthritis in a Physical Activity Intervention

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Duke University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Osteoarthritis, Hip
Osteoarthritis, Knee

Treatments

Behavioral: Adapted-Engage-PA

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05652413
Pro00108300

Details and patient eligibility

About

Physical activity like walking is one important way to reduce pain and improve wellbeing for older adults with knee and hip arthritis, but most older adults and particularly those who identify as African American struggle to walk regularly. Many African Americans with arthritis have worse outcomes (like worse pain, worse overall health) than other racial and ethnic groups for many reasons including racist policies and ideas that make getting good health care more difficult. It is therefore most important to identify ways to help older adults who identify as African American improve their arthritis pain and improve their daily steps. The current study is designed to learn about older African American's preferences for a brief behavioral intervention to increase daily steps and reduce pain, and to learn about the barriers (things that make walking harder) and facilitators (things that make walking easier) for walking that they experience. Interviews with both patients and healthcare providers will provide important information that will be used to adapt an existing behavioral intervention designed to help patients increase their daily steps and reduce their arthritis pain. The final adapted intervention will be tested in a small clinical trial with older adults who identify as African American to see if it can reduce pain and increase walking over time.

Full description

Osteoarthritis is one of the most common risk factors for disability for African American older adults. Older adults who identify as African American experience more severe arthritis, higher pain levels, more pain related interference, more health problems that occur alongside arthritis, and have greater problems accessing appropriate and timely care for arthritis than other racial and ethnic groups. Physical activity can help improve pain and is safe even for older adults, but few older adults walk regularly due to pain, psychological distress, and other environmental barriers for walking. Specific strategies targeted to support older African Americans in walking more are needed. A previously tested behavioral intervention called Engage-PA has shown promise for supporting older adults with arthritis in the knee and/or hip. Yet little is know about how promising this intervention is for older African Americans, nor the specific barriers and facilitators for walking more for this population. Some specific components of Engage-PA may be particularly culturally-relevant for older African Americans, such as the use of personal values, or a detailed discussion of personally-identified meaning and purpose linked to daily walking routines. Older African Americans with arthritis and primary care providers treating arthritis at Duke Health have provided interview data to assist researchers in adapting Engage-PA to be more culturally sensitive. Adapted-Engage-PA will be tested with older African Americans who have knee and/or hip pain from osteoarthritis in a small feasibility and acceptability trial.

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. age 65 or older
  2. English speaking
  3. identify as Black/African American
  4. diagnosis of osteoarthritis in knee or hip
  5. able to ambulate even if assisted with walker or cane
  6. endorse worst pain and pain interference as ≥ 3 out of 10 within the last week

Exclusion criteria

  1. hearing or visual impairment that would prevent ability to participate in sessions or use participant worksheets, even with use of adaptive supports/devices
  2. planned surgery during study duration that would limit mobility (e.g., due to recommended rehabilitation or recovery period) for more than 3 weeks
  3. current enrollment in cardiac rehabilitation
  4. myocardial infarction in the past 3 months
  5. major surgery requiring limited movement or mobility for recovery within the past 3 months
  6. presence of a serious psychiatric condition (e.g., schizophrenia, suicidal intent) that would contraindicate safe study participation
  7. Medical provider indicating that exercise (even walking) should only be medically supervised
  8. fall or falls within the last 3 months that led to immediate medical treatment/hospitalization
  9. reported or suspected moderate or severe cognitive impairment
  10. brain tumor/cancer metastases to the brain
  11. no other conditions that would preclude safe participation (e.g., unmanaged heart conditions, neurodegenerative condition, unmanaged diabetes, severe respiratory disease), as screened the Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR-Q+ 2020, a measure widely utilized by the U.S. National Academy of Sports Medicine and the Public Health Agency of Canada). Answers to the PARQ+2020 may result in review by patient physicians for safety prior to enrollment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

16 participants in 1 patient group

Adapted-Engage-PA
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive two sessions, lasting 60 minutes each, of behavioral intervention strategies to increase daily walking routines and prevent pain flares.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Adapted-Engage-PA

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jennifer Plumb Vilardaga, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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