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Evaluation of Safety and Health Involvement For Truck Drivers (SHIFT)

Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) logo

Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity

Treatments

Behavioral: Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT02105571
e3061
R01HL105495 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The current project is a randomized, controlled evaluation of a new weight loss and health promotion intervention for truck drivers. The intervention is a 6-month weight loss competition supported with computer based training, behavioral self-monitoring, and motivational interviewing. We hypothesize that the intervention will produce greater change than a usual practices control condition. Our secondary hypothesis is that social support and stress in home and work environments will moderate intervention efficacy.

Full description

Commercial truck drivers have overweight and obesity rates that may be 20% higher than the general population. Obesity has established mortality and disease consequences, including heart disease, diabetes, and sleep apnea. Driver health is also an important safety hazard because obesity and sleep apnea increase the risk of crashes. Drivers experience multiple roadblocks to health, including an isolating job structure that restricts physical activity and dietary choices. Despite the growing health crisis, there is a lack of effective weight loss and health promotion interventions for truck drivers. We therefore developed an intervention that is integrated with the job structure and modern technologies of truck driving. The intervention is a 6-month weight loss competition supported with computer based training, behavioral self-monitoring, and motivational interviewing. The study is a cluster randomized trial where worksites (terminals) will be randomized to intervention and control conditions. We will collect measures from drivers at baseline (month 0), post-intervention (month 6), and one-year follow-up (month 18). The project will take place over five years and accomplish three specific aims:

  1. Determine intervention efficacy for producing changes in diet, exercise, and body weight. Previous weight loss interventions for truck drivers have been minimally effective, and there is a need to evaluate new approaches with randomized, controlled designs. Therefore, we will randomize matched pairs of worksites (terminals) to intervention and control conditions. Drivers at intervention terminals will complete intervention activities over a 6-month period. Drivers at control terminals will receive no treatment during the same time period. Primary outcomes will be changes in body weight, fruit and vegetable consumption, high-saturated fat and high-sugar food consumption, and physical activity.
  2. Determine whether baseline social support and stress moderate intervention efficacy. Although social support and stress have established effects on weight loss with other populations, we know little about the role of social support and stress during interventions for truck drivers. Therefore, we will measure social support and stress in home and work environments at each measurement time point. After the intervention, and again at one-year follow-up, we will test whether social support and stress factors moderated subsequent behavior change and weight loss.
  3. Measure the integrity of each intervention component and model how the intervention worked. We are evaluating a new multi-component intervention with an understudied population. In order to understand how the intervention worked and guide future research, we will measure fidelity and participation in each intervention component and use mediation analyses to determine how the different components affected study outcomes. Analyses will provide an explicit check of the intervention's theoretical underpinnings and assess whether proposed change processes were achieved.

Accomplishing our aims will significantly advance weight loss and health promotion knowledge to the benefit of over 3 million truck drivers in the US, and potentially generalize to 15 million additional workers who spend substantial time alone or traveling for work.

Enrollment

472 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Truck driver currently employed at a participating company
  • BMI > 27.0

Exclusion criteria

  • None

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

472 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention activities take place over a 6-month period for each participant, and include a weight loss competition with self-monitoring and feedback; computer-based training units on healthy weight loss, healthy eating, exercise, and sleep; and up to four motivational interviews with a health coach by cell phone.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Intervention
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Continued work conditions and "Usual Practices" in that workplace

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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