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Evaluation of Combined Support for the Ambulatory Lifestyle Intervention (GOAL!)

G

GGZ Centraal

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Severe Mental Illness
Lifestyle

Treatments

Behavioral: GOAL!

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

For people with a severe mental illness (SMI) there is no appropriate lifestyle intervention in ambulatory care, while they would benefit greatly from it. With SMI is meant mainly psychotic-, bipolar- and severe mood or anxiety disorders that require long-term care and counseling. People with SMI have a one-and-a-half to two times higher risk of heart disease, diabetes, and reduced mental health than the general population. This combination contributes to up to 15 years shorter life expectancy and reduced quality of life. Lifestyle plays an important role in this. Combined Support for the Ambulatory Lifestyle Intervention (GOAL!) is a multidisciplinary lifestyle support intervention where people with SMI are supervised for a longer period of time by qualified professionals, with attention to individual wishes and perceived challenges. Although the newly introduced so-called combined lifestyle interventions, that were recently introduced on a national level, follow this line of thinking, people with SMI may not benefit sufficiently from this offer. From the common challenge and need to create improved support, GGz Centraal in cooperation with the municipalities in the North Veluwe and local partners developed GOAL! and will pilot its use. This is done in cooperation with health insurers within the framework of an Innovation Policy Rule of the Dutch Healthcare Authority. The aim of this study is to follow this innovation and evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of GOAL!.

Full description

Study design and setting

GOAL! will be evaluated through a quasi-experimental study with a mixed-method matched design. People with severe mental illness (SMI) receiving ambulatory care within the municipalities of North Veluwe will participate in the intervention. People who participate in GOAL! will be invited to additionally participate in its evaluation on a voluntary basis. Participants will be compared with a group of people with SMI who continue to receive usual counseling and care. This comparison group will be recruited outside municipalities where GOAL! takes place to avoid contamination. The aim is to recruit 50 participants of GOAL! for the evaluation and to create an equal comparison group of 50 participants matched for gender, age, and diagnosis. To evaluate the effects of GOAL! measurements will be conducted at baseline (T0), after 3 months (T1), after 12 months (T2), and after 24 months (T3).

Intervention

GOAL! aims to provide integrated support focused on a combination of lifestyle factors for achieving a healthier lifestyle for people with SMI. The intervention consists of one year of active guidance by the lifestyle coach, after which a maintenance program for another year is available. The participant starts with an intake interview with the lifestyle coach and then starts a basic course of three months in which participants have three group meetings of one hour each week. The group meetings focus on exercise (twice a week) and nutrition (once a week), and are given by qualified professionals in this field. After the basic course of three months a follow-up course of nine months starts with two group meetings of one hour per month given by the lifestyle coach. After the guidance phase of twelve months there is a maintenance program of also twelve months. This program consists of five sessions with individual counseling and three group meetings by the lifestyle coach.

Analysis

To measure the intervention effect, linear mixed models will be used. Although intervention and control groups are matched, potential differences between the groups on participant and disease characteristics are analyzed with independent t-tests (continuous variables) and chi-square tests (categorical variables). All models will be corrected for the baseline value, baseline disease severity, and monthly income category as a potential confounder for lifestyle behaviors. Corrections are made for potential clustering at the level of treatment team, neighborhood and municipality.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years of age or older;
  • Diagnosed with a severe mental illness (SMI; defined as within treatment of a FACT team);
  • Excessive abdominal circumference (≥102 cm for men or ≥ 88 cm for women; this is one of five risk factors for metabolic syndrome);
  • Presence of at least one of the other four risk factors as clustered in the criteria for metabolic syndrome (hypertension, abnormal triglycerides, fasting blood sugar and HDL cholesterol, or medication use for blood pressure or values).

Exclusion criteria

  • If someone lacks the legal capacity to give independent consent for participation and no (legal) representative is willing to give consent;
  • If the disease severity at that time does not permit participation (i.e. acute psychological state, acute psychosis, or suicidality).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

GOAL!
Experimental group
Description:
Combined Support for the Ambulatory Lifestyle Intervention
Treatment:
Behavioral: GOAL!
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Care and counseling as usual (matched for gender, age and diagnosis)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jeroen Deenik, Dr.; Chermaine Noortman - van Meteren, MSc.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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