Health Literacy and Obesogenic Behaviors

NCT ID: NCT04252677

Last Updated: 2025-02-12

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

36 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-11-16

Study Completion Date

2024-12-30

Brief Summary

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The prevalence of adolescent behaviors that can lead to obesity are alarming, and reduced life expectancy is the future of America's youth if behavioral changes are not implemented to improve health and reduce the obesity burden. Researchers have argued that health literacy is a precursor to health knowledge and is necessary for translating knowledge about healthy choices into behavior, with low health literacy being associated with reduced preventive health behaviors in adults. Given the lack of health literacy-specific interventions addressing adolescents' obesogenic behaviors, the purpose of this study is to examine the preliminary effectiveness of adding a health literacy module to an obesity prevention intervention that addresses adolescents' obesogenic behaviors.

Detailed Description

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The rates of pediatric obesity (\~19%) and diabetes (0.24%) in the US are alarming and behaviors implicated in obesity and type 2 diabetes are highly prevalent. Approximately 69% and 73% of adolescents consume less than two fruits and vegetables daily respectively, while 53% engage in insufficient physical activity. These behaviors magnify adolescents' immediate and long-term risks for obesity and obesity-related chronic illnesses, as well as complicate the treatment of obesity-related chronic illnesses. Children and adolescents who are obese are four times more likely to be diagnosed with type 2 diabetes than normal weight children, with serious short and long-term consequences impacting quality of life. Reduced life expectancy is the future of America's youth if behavioral changes are not implemented to improve health and reduce the obesity burden. Reversing current national trends in obesity and type 2 diabetes require novel and sustainable prevention strategies to address children and adolescents' obesogenic behaviors.

Adolescence is marked by increased autonomy in decision-making, yet data suggest that adolescents are not equipped with all the skills to make effective health-related behavioral decisions. While health knowledge works in conjunction with motivation and behavioral skills to predict behavior, most existing adolescent interventions target these variables in isolation with modest success. Researchers have argued that health literacy (HL) - the ability to access, understand, and use health information to make informed health decisions - is a precursor to health knowledge and is necessary for translating health knowledge into behavior. Low HL among adults is associated with poor ability to interpret health messages, and results in reduced preventive health behaviors. Further, parent and adolescent HL is negatively related to adolescents' obesity status. Thus, while research on adding HL to existing behavior interventions to improve adolescents' obesity prevention behaviors is lacking, it is expected that the inclusion of HL into existing interventions will increase intervention effectiveness and positive behavior outcomes.

The long-term goal of this line of research is to reduce the incidence of obesity in adolescents and by extension reduce the risk for obesity-related chronic illnesses using interventions that address individual and contextual factors related to long-term health decision-making and behavior change. The goal of the proposed study is to examine the effect of adding a HL component to an obesity prevention intervention that addresses adolescents' obesogenic behavior-related health knowledge, motivation, and behavioral skills. The central hypothesis is adolescents receiving HL training as part of an obesity prevention intervention will have higher rates of prevention behaviors than those in the obesity prevention only condition. Study goals will be achieved through the following specific aims:

Aim 1: Modify successful components of existing obesity prevention interventions into an interactive digital platform with and without HL for acceptability and usability in adolescents.

Approach: Use successful components of existing interventions, our completed preliminary research, and our research teams' expertise to develop an interactive digital intervention including HL, and obesogenic behavior-related health knowledge, motivation, and behavioral skills. Assess and modify the intervention for usability and acceptability among 14-16-year-olds through an iterative process.

Aim 2: Determine if the addition of HL training to an interactive digital obesity prevention intervention will improve adolescents' obesity prevention behaviors over the obesity intervention alone.

Hypothesis: Adolescents in the obesity prevention plus HL intervention will have higher rates of obesity prevention behaviors at posttest and follow-up compared to the obesity prevention only group.

Approach: Conduct a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) intervention (obesity prevention only, obesity prevention/HL) and estimate the intervention's effects on obesogenic behaviors. Adolescents (n = 76; 14-16-year-olds) will be randomly assigned to each condition (38/condition). Conduct pretest, posttest, and 1- and 3-month assessments of HL, obesogenic behaviors, and obesogenic behavior-related motivation, behavioral skills, and knowledge.

Outcomes: Intervention completion will result in effect size estimates of improvements in obesity prevention behaviors, health knowledge, motivation, and behavioral skills for both groups with greater improvements for the HL group at posttest and follow-up. The obesity prevention/HL intervention group will also have higher HL at posttest and follow-up. Retention, recruitment, completion and treatment fidelity rates will be established.

Innovation \& Impact: This study incorporates HL, an understudied but potentially critical factor in adolescents' health behaviors. The intervention will be developed and implemented in a digital format which will increase reach and impact. This is the first study examining the effect of including HL in adolescents' obesity prevention interventions. This study sets the groundwork for a full scale, RCT to assess the benefit of HL training added to an obesity prevention intervention to address adolescents' obesogenic behaviors.

Conditions

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Obesity, Adolescent Health Behavior Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Diet, Healthy Exercise Health Literacy

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

PREVENTION

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Vaping and Obesity Prevention Only

Obesity prevention and vaping

1. Vaping:

* Factual information about vaping devices and vaping
* Beliefs and attitudes about nicotine products
* Refusing and avoiding vaping
* Recognizing addiction and getting help
2. Health information:

• Factual information about healthy eating and activity (PA)
3. Motivation:

* Personal: Create positive attitudes toward engagement in healthy eating and PA
* Social: Enlisting social support to increase healthy eating and PA
* Social: Identification of community resources that promote and support healthy eating and PA
4. Behavioral Skills

* Tips for engaging in prevention behaviors and avoiding risk behaviors in the context of existing barriers
* Skills for social situations around behaviors
* Skills for making behavior part of routine
* Build autonomy, self-efficacy and model good health decision-making for health behaviors

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Obesity Prevention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

This intervention includes content specific to obesity behaviors-related health information, motivation, and behavioral skills.

Health Literacy and Obesity Prevention

Obesity prevention and health literacy (HL).

1. Health Literacy

* Functional HL: skills for reading/understanding nutrition labels and medication instructions.
* Interactive HL: verbal skills for interacting with others on health issues.
* Critical HL: connections between advocacy and health
* Media HL: skills for accessing and identifying reliable source of media.
2. Health information:

• Factual information about healthy eating and activity (PA)
3. Motivation:

* Create positive attitudes toward engagement in healthy eating and PA
* Enlisting social support to increase healthy eating and PA
* Identification of community resources that promote and support healthy eating and PA
4. Behavioral Skills

* Tips for engaging in prevention behaviors and avoiding risk behaviors
* Skills for social situations around behaviors
* Skills for making behavior part of routine
* Build autonomy, self-efficacy and good health decision-making for health behaviors

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Obesity Prevention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

This intervention includes content specific to obesity behaviors-related health information, motivation, and behavioral skills.

Health Literacy

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

This intervention includes content specific to improving health literacy.

Interventions

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Obesity Prevention

This intervention includes content specific to obesity behaviors-related health information, motivation, and behavioral skills.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Health Literacy

This intervention includes content specific to improving health literacy.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adolescents 13-16 years old at time of enrollment (may turn age 17 during the study
* Must have parental consent
* All weight classifications

Exclusion Criteria

* Adolescents younger than 13 years or older than 16 years at time of enrollment
* No parental consent
* Medical conditions preventing engagement in physical activity
* Medical conditions resulting in extremely restricted diets (e.g., ketogenic diet)
* Already participating in an intervention related to healthy eating, physical activity and/or obesity prevention or treatment
Minimum Eligible Age

13 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

17 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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City University of New York, School of Public Health

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Sasha Fleary

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Sasha A Fleary, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

City University of New York

Locations

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Neighborhood House Charter School

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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Fleary SA. A Web-Based Intervention to Improve Health Literacy and Obesogenic Behaviors Among Adolescents: Protocol of a Randomized Pilot Feasibility Study for a Parallel Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2022 Aug 16;11(8):e40191. doi: 10.2196/40191.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 35972787 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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HLSQUARED01

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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