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Multiple studies have demonstrated a very low prevalence of women meeting physical activity and weight gain recommendations during pregnancy. The aim of this study is to provide a lifestyle intervention to increase physical activity, reduce carbohydrate intake, prevent excessive gestational weight gain, decrease postpartum weight retention, and improve mental well-being compared to "usual care" using a randomized controlled design in pregnant women. Participants in the intervention group will receive behavioral lifestyle counseling and take part in monthly one-on-one visits with a registered dietitian (RDN) from approximately week 14 of their pregnancy to child birth. Participants in the "usual care" group (control) will not receive any lifestyle counseling. Data collected from this group will be used to compare the effectiveness of the lifestyle intervention. Unlike many studies examining diet and physical activity factors alone, this study evaluates additional psychosocial factors such as psychological health, self-efficacy, competence, motivation and barriers that may influence excessive gestational weight gain. In addition, the Self-Determination Theory framework will be used to measure how motivation and motivational interviewing strategies can help explain changes in volitional behavior.
Full description
Pregnant women will be recruited using mass email recruitment, fliers posted at local community settings, and at local OBGYN offices in Ames,IA. Pregnant women will be recruited prior to their 14th week of gestation. Interested individuals will contact the Blossom Project staff for further information.
A randomized controlled design will be used. Following baseline data collection, women will be randomized into the intervention group (n=30) or control (n=30).
For this study, the goal is to have a total of 30 women in the intervention group and 30 in the control. With an attrition rate of 20% investigators plan to enroll 37 women per group. Furthermore, increased enrollment numbers will cover inconsistencies that may arise with missing or uninterpretable data.
Individuals who contact the Blossom Project will be screened for eligibility. Individuals that meet the inclusion and exclusion criteria will meet with a Blossom Project staff member to sign an informed consent form approved by the Iowa State University Institutional Review Board (ISU-IRB). A "medical consent form" (not the consent form for the study participant) will be sent to the woman's primary obstetric provider asking to confirm qualification criteria. Participants will then be asked to complete a medical history questionnaire.
Eligible participants will be asked to complete a maximum of four data collection periods. Participants will report to the Nutrition Wellness Research Center (NWRC) either on campus (HNSB 2021, 2022, 2023) or the facility located at 2325 North Loop Drive, Suite 6100, Ames, Iowa 50010, at the beginning and end of each of the four data collection periods. A "visit" or "data collection period" is defined as 8 days. There are 3 data collection periods during pregnancy (visits 1-3) and one post-partum visit (visit 4). Visit 4 is not an 8-day data collection period and will take no more than 90 minutes at the NWRC.
Data that will be collected during each of the data collection periods will include:
Visit 1: Prior to 14-weeks of pregnancy (8-14 weeks):
Visit 2 (weeks 26-28):
Visit 3 (weeks 34-36)
Visit 4 (2 months post-partum):
In order to protect the privacy of participants within the study records identifying participants will be kept confidential to the extent allowed by applicable laws and regulations. Records will not be made publicly available. To ensure confidentiality to the extent allowed by law, the following measures will be taken. Participants will be assigned a unique code that will be used on forms instead of their name. The signed consent form, medical provider consent form, and release of medical information forms will all need the woman's full name to identify her to her prenatal clinic and delivering hospital. These forms will be locked in a separate filing cabinet from the forms with the participant codes to prevent identification of the participants. If the results are published, the identity will remain confidential. The data obtained from the study will be regarded as privileged and confidential. The privacy will be maintained in any future analysis and/or presentation of the data with the use of coded identifications for each participant's data.Only members of the Blossom Project lab staff will have access to the data and study records. All data will be stored in a locked file cabinet with access only by the principal investigator and project staff. This data will be kept on hand in a separate locked file in the PI's laboratory (HNSB 1109, Iowa State University) until the results of the study have been published. Identifiers will be kept separate from the data. All electronic data is stored on a shared drive only accessible to the principal investigator and project staff which requires a password to access.
For statistical analysis data will be presented as descriptive variables. These variables will consist of diet, physical activity characteristics, adherence to daily step count recommendations, and postpartum outcomes. Between group differences, time effects, and corresponding interactions in the above variables will be assessed by a series of two-way analysis of variance contrasts. When identified, such differences will be further explored, in terms of relationships to the other measured characteristics of the study groups via correlations and regression-based modeling procedures. Statistical significance will be set at p < 0.05 and adjusted for any multiple comparisons.
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56 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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