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Mentoring to be Active for Rural Appalachia Children

The Ohio State University logo

The Ohio State University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Physical Activity
Body Composition
Exercise

Treatments

Behavioral: Tracking Health and Fitness
Behavioral: Mentoring to be Active plus Family

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05758441
GR130196
11-22-ICTSN-30 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The innovative MPBA+F begins with peer-to-peer mentoring followed by structured parental/family support for long-term reinforcement of PA behaviors. Building and reinforcing skills, MPBA+F mitigates resource stressors and strengthens protective factors by providing culturally appropriate knowledge and skills to improve the sustainability of physical activity at home without the use of exercise equipment. By strengthening social support through peer and friendship networks and family-based support, MPBA+F responds to the unique needs of rural Appalachians in a culturally responsive way. This study targets physical activity among children with overweight, obesity, or extreme obesity because rural Appalachian communities identify sedentary activity as a key contributor to the high rates of obesity and diabetes risk among youth.

Full description

Appalachians die more frequently and at younger ages from obesity-related conditions than those living elsewhere. High prevalence of overweight, obesity, and extreme obesity in Appalachian children increases the severity of diabetes. In rural Appalachia, the diabetes mortality rate is 11% higher than the national rate.Over the course of two years, this study will test the effects of the Mentored Planning to be Active + Family intervention on physical activity outcomes (MVPA, exercise "bouts", sedentary behavior) and health outcomes (body composition: BMI, body fat, % body fat, weight) among rural Appalachian 7/8th grade children suffering from overweight and obesity. Having teens deliver the content via structured peer mentoring increases social support, motivation, and self-regulation to sustain PA behaviors to improve health outcomes as children enter high school. Using local residents for intervention delivery leverages rural Appalachians' preference to receive health information via established social networks and extends delivery of the program into the community. This study is a community-based randomized controlled trial targeting 7th grade students in rural Appalachia. Half (n = 144) will receive MPBA+F; the other half (n = 144) will receive self-guided (usual care) modules. Tenth-grade (n = 73) students from the same rural Appalachian counties will serve as peer mentors delivering MPBA for the peer mentoring group. Parents will provide a family reinforcement program during 8th grade and provide assessments of child behaviors and health outcomes. The long-term goal is to reduce the high rates of OW, OB/EO and type 2 diabetes in Appalachia youth through effective, sustainable interventions. Improving self-regulation, self-efficacy, and social support to increase intentional exercise and MVPA among underserved youth suffering from early-onset OB/EO builds healthier lifestyle behaviors at a critical development time.

Enrollment

432 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

11+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Children:

  • enrolled in 7th grade at the start of the study,
  • have a body mass index percentile of 85th or greater for age and gender,
  • not under medical care for OB or type 1 diabetes,
  • have reliable internet connection at home,
  • have access to a computer, laptop or tablet at home,
  • not expected to move from the participating county before the conclusion of the study.

Parents:

  • read at a 5th grade-level,
  • speak English,
  • have a home-mailing address (not PO box),
  • have a working telephone number, and
  • are not expected to move from the participating county before study conclusion.

High school peer mentors:

  • are in either 10th or 11th grade at the start of the recruitment,
  • reside in a targeted county,
  • interested in working with peers, supporting others, and striving to cultivate their own health-supportive behaviors,
  • have reliable internet connection at home,
  • have access to a computer, laptop or tablet at home,
  • are not expected to move before the intervention ends,
  • can speak English,
  • are recommended by a teacher, school advisor, or counselor.

Exclusion criteria

Child:

  • not in 7th grade at the start of the study.
  • not able to read or Speak English;
  • not classified as either overweight or obese at start of study.

Parents :

- not able to read or speak English.

High school peer mentors:

- cannot speak and read English.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

432 participants in 2 patient groups

Mentoring to be Active plus Family (MPBA+F)
Experimental group
Description:
For the first phase, ten peer-mentoring sessions (1 day/week for 45 minutes each week) delivered virtually with a Project Leader, five peer mentors, and 8-10 mentees with 1:2 mentor/mentee ratios. Each session consists of a 10-15 minute content lesson followed by 20-30 minutes of guided practice, social support, feedback, and personal goal-setting for the following week in small peer mentor/mentee "break-out" rooms. Mentees track activities and efforts towards meeting personal goals. Parents return their child's weekly completed 'Tracker" forms either electronically via the secure, password-protected project website or (if they prefer) by regular pre-paid mail service. The reinforcement component of MPBA+F is a guided, parent-directed 6-module (0nce a month for 6 months) program for parents/guardians to further support the child's home-based PA. Child participants assigned to MPBA will be provided the modules.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mentoring to be Active plus Family
Tracking Health and Fitness
Active Comparator group
Description:
Half of child participants will receive "Tracking your Health and Fitness", a comparison program of 10 weekly, self-guided modules from Ohio State University (OSU) Extension mailed to their home. Child participants assigned to the "Tracking Health and Fitness" program (comparison group) may voluntarily participate in a 6-month rewards-based self-regulation program to encourage sustainability of weekly PA.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Tracking Health and Fitness

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Sandra Solove, MA; Laureen Smith, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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