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The KaHOLO Project: Preventing Cardiovascular Disease in Native Hawaiians

University of Hawaii logo

University of Hawaii

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Hypertension

Treatments

Behavioral: Hula intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02620709
KaHOLO Project

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project is a community-engaged, randomized control trial of hula, the indigenous dance form of Native Hawaiians (NH), among 250 NHs with hypertension living in Hawaii and Washington State. Investigators will compare the effects of a 6-month intervention, called the KaHOLO Program, delivered by trained peer educators to a wait-list control condition on blood pressure and 10-year cardiovascular risk. The intervention will be comprised of hula plus hypertension self-care education program. Investigators will also examine the mediating effects of health behaviors, self-regulation, psychosocial, and socio-cultural factors on blood pressure reduction. The ultimate goal is to develop and test a culturally-appropriate, acceptable, and effective intervention that can be delivered and sustained in community settings.

Full description

Native Hawaiians (NH) have higher rates of chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease (CVD), diabetes, and cancer. Hypertension (HTN), an important modifiable risk factor for CVD, is 70% higher in Native Hawaiians (NH) than in Whites. In fact, NH are 3-4 times more likely to develop CVD conditions, such as stroke and coronary heart disease, and at a younger age. In addition to prescribed medication, improvements in HTN can be achieved through increased physical activity (PA) and self-management education (e.g. stress management, reduces sodium intake, weight-loss, and smoking cessation). Yet, many commonly prescribed PA, such as jogging and use of treadmills, are difficult for NH to initiate and maintain because of socioeconomic barriers and lack of alignment with NH preferred modes of living and cultural values (i.e. familial interdependence, group-based PA, cultural PA).

This research study uses hula, the traditional dance form of NH and hallmark of NH culture, as the PA basis for a culturally relevant and sustainable CVD prevention program targeting HTN management. Hula training is popular, not only Hawai'i, but across the U.S. through the 784 hālau hula (hula schools) found in most States. Using a community-based participatory research (CBPR) framework, a hula-based CVD health intervention was strongly endorsed by Kumu hula (hula experts and guardians of hula traditions), NH individuals, and communities. Further, hula was determined to yield metabolic equivalent of energy expenditure as a moderate and vigorous intensity PA. Data from a pilot CBPR randomized control trial (RCT) study found that 60 minutes of hula training twice a week for 12 weeks reduced systolic blood pressure (BP) by 7.5 mmHg (SD=16.5) more than the control group, but the long-term effects were mixed and the study did not assess CVD risk.

Interestingly, the pilot intervention also improved social functioning, reduced physical pain, and perceived racial discrimination, suggesting a possible psychosocial and socio-cultural mechanism by which the intervention affects BP. In this study a CBPR guided RCT of 250 NH with physician-diagnosed HTN in Hawai'i and Washington State is offered. The effects will be compared of a 6-month intervention that combines hula training and brief culturally-tailored HTN self-management education delivered by peer educators and Kumu hula to a wait-list control group in reducing systolic BP and CVD risk scores. It will also be determined the mediating effects of health behaviors (e.g., smoking), self-regulation, and psychosocial (e.g., social support), and socio-cultural factors (e.g., perceived racism) on blood pressure reduction. The goal is to build on the existing widespread infrastructure of hālau hula and NH organizations to deliver a sustainable, culturally-preferred CVD prevention program.

Enrollment

275 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Native Hawaiian ancestry
  • Physician diagnosed HTN
  • Continued SBP>140
  • Physicians approval to participate in moderate PA
  • No prior CVD history

Exclusion criteria

  • Pregnant

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

275 participants in 2 patient groups

Hula intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Participants randomized to the intervention arm will receive the 6-month KaHOLO Program within 1 week of baseline data collection. The first 3 months of the KaHOLO was designed and standardized as a culturally-based PA, which includes 12 weeks of hula lessons. These hula lessons consist of two 60 minute classes per week over 12 weeks. Each hula lesson will consist of 15 participants, providing with the opportunity to engage in social support network. The last three months of the program will be reduced to once a week sessions. One week will consist of hula lessons for 60 minutes. The remaining 3 weeks will consist of the intervention group meeting for 45 minutes with the community-peer educator.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Hula intervention
Wait-List Control
No Intervention group
Description:
After baseline data collection and education, participants randomized to the wait-list control arm will not receive the KaHOLO Program while their counterparts who were randomized to the intervention arm are undergoing the intervention program. Thus, they will not receive the intervention for 6 months until after the intervention arm is completed and their 6 month follow-up data collection is completed. They will not receive any other intervention from us during the 6 month period but they will be instructed to continue with their routine medical care as usual.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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