A Multi-component Physical Activity Intervention for Adolescent Girls
NCT ID: NCT04766372
Last Updated: 2021-02-23
Study Results
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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UNKNOWN
NA
160 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-11-30
2021-09-30
Brief Summary
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1. Physical activity programme only - live exercise sessions, social support, standardised text messages
2. Individual behaviour change support only - regular one-to-one video calls with an activity mentor
3. Combined - Physical activity provision and individual behaviour change support
4. Usual care control All groups will be provided with a menu of physical activities.
Objectives.
To conduct a RE-AIM evaluation of a 6-month multi-component PA intervention for adolescent girls, through investigating:
* Who the intervention reaches, how representative they are for the population (Reach, Adoption) and who is most likely to benefit from the intervention (Reach);
* The extent to which the intervention is delivered as intended (Implementation), and factors that affect this (Adoption);
* Preliminary impact on participants' PA, sedentary behaviour, cardiovascular fitness and psychological wellbeing at 3, 6 and 12 months (Effectiveness, Maintenance);
* The qualitatively examine the acceptability of the intervention for adolescent girls, and identify necessary refinements;
* To gather data to inform a sample size calculation for a main trail
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Detailed Description
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Randomisation. Participants will be randomly allocated to one of the four intervention arms following baseline measures. 40 participants will be allocated to each arm using block randomisation on Microsoft Excel.
Intervention group - The goals of this physical activity intervention are to 1) increase adolescent girls total physical activity levels and 2) improve adolescent girls health behaviours, including body appreciation and motivation. This study hopes to build on our prior feasibility work to help us to understand which components of the intervention are most effective, i.e. a physical activity programme, individual behaviour change support or a combination. To achieve these goals the following elements will be implemented:
* Menu of physical activity options: Participants in all four groups will be given a booklet with suggestions of ways to be physically active, e.g. YouTube workouts, cycling or jogging, sports, or design their own using a home-based exercise booklet. They are asked to do 3 sessions of 30 minutes per week. Participants are asked to record what activity they did and the duration of the session using a method most convenient for them, e.g. notes on their phone, wall calendar or using an activity log template which the investigators will provide.
* Physical activity programme: Participants in groups 1 and 3 will receive -
* Non Reply SMS: Sent to the participant mobile three times per week by the primary researcher, Emma Cowley PhD candidate, from an online non-reply messaging service. This service is password protected. All messages will be standardised (not personally tailored) and will be focused on behaviour change techniques or reminders.
* Live exercise sessions: The researcher (with personal training and physical education teaching qualifications) will host two online group fitness classes each week which participants are also invited to join. This option is to allow participants the potential to engage with the other participants on the programme from the comfort of their own homes. It is also thought that having a scheduled set time to join a class on line may increase motivation and improve adherence, however the choice to join the class is optional. From previous feasibility work, these sessions were a highlight of the programme and often times parents and siblings would join in too. Participants are invited to turn their cameras on for the intro and warm up, however this is not mandatory.
* Access to a social media group: With participant and parental consent, participants are invited to join a private group community online where they can access additional resources provided by the research team, ask questions in an informal setting and communicate with the other participants in the programme. It is well researched that social connection is a facilitator to adolescent girls participation in physical activity and as participants will be exercising from home the investigators feel giving them access to a social, safe and virtual community can help give them this social connectedness to other adolescent girls of the same age. This is not compulsory and participants are free to join the group, leave the group or decline being added to the group without it affecting their participation in the rest of the programme.
* Individual behaviour change support:
* Participants in group 2 and 3 will be partnered with an 'activity mentor' whom they will work with for the duration of the intervention. These activity mentors are postgraduate students either studying for an MSc in sport and exercise psychology, or post-MSc and undertaking professional training. Their role is to support the participants with improving their health behaviours, autonomy and motivation. Participants will receive weekly calls from week 0-6 and then calls on week 9 and 12. Calls will be via phone call, FaceTime or Teams video call. Behaviour change support will be based on self-determination theory principles (autonomy, competence and relatedness; Ryan \& Deci, 2000). Each call will be based on a pre-planned session outline and will be goal orientated, participant centred and focused on physical activity. Calls are expected to last 10-20 minutes per participant. A sub-sample of calls will be audio recorded to assess intervention fidelity.
Control: menu of physical activity options only. As this project runs for 6 months it will not be possible to provide the control group with the full physical activity programme (this is part of a PhD study). However, it is intended to provide the control group participants with intervention materials (home-HIIT booklets, field-based testing instructions) so that participants can implement the physical activity programme without the direct oversight of the research team. At the end of the intervention, control participants will also be offered to do a group behaviour change psychology session with an activity mentor.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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Menu of physical activity options
Participants in all 4 groups will receive this booklet with suggestions of ways to be physically active, e.g. YouTube workouts, cycling or jogging, sports, or design their own using a home-based exercise booklet. Participants are asked to do 3 exercise sessions of 30 minutes per week. Participants are asked to record what activity they did and the duration of the session using a method most convenient for them, e.g. notes on their phone, wall calendar or using an activity log template which we will provide.
.
Behaviour change
Using needs supportive, self-determination theory-based, components to improve the physical activity behaviours of adolescent girls.
Physical activity programme
Participants in the second group with receive the activity menu (as described above) as well as a detailed physical activity programme. This programme includes supportive weekly text messages, access to live workouts and access to an online social community.
Behaviour change
Using needs supportive, self-determination theory-based, components to improve the physical activity behaviours of adolescent girls.
Individual behaviour change support
Participants in the third group with receive the activity menu (as described above) as well as individual behaviour change support. Each participant is partnered with a trainee sport psychology ("Activity Mentor") who they have weekly video calls with to support their health behaviour change.
Behaviour change
Using needs supportive, self-determination theory-based, components to improve the physical activity behaviours of adolescent girls.
Activity Programme & Behaviour Change Support
Participants in the fourth group will receive all of the above (exercise menu, live workouts, social community, support texts and weekly calls with an Activity Mentor).
Behaviour change
Using needs supportive, self-determination theory-based, components to improve the physical activity behaviours of adolescent girls.
Interventions
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Behaviour change
Using needs supportive, self-determination theory-based, components to improve the physical activity behaviours of adolescent girls.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* 13-16 years
* Living in the UK or Ireland
* Would like support with becoming more physically active
* Ability to participate in moderate intensity physical activity according to the Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire
Exclusion Criteria
* Currently doing more than 1 hour of exercise or sport every day.
* Currently pregnant
* Not having access to at least ONE of the following: a smartphone, home computer, or parent smartphone.
13 Years
16 Years
FEMALE
Yes
Sponsors
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Dublin City University
OTHER
University of Liverpool
OTHER
Liverpool John Moores University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Anton Wagenmakers, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Liverpool John Moores University
Locations
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Dublin City University
Dublin, , Ireland
Liverpool John Moores University
Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom
University of Liverpool
Liverpool, , United Kingdom
Countries
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References
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Cowley ES, Watson PM, Foweather L, Belton S, Thompson A, Thijssen D, Wagenmakers AJM. "Girls Aren't Meant to Exercise": Perceived Influences on Physical Activity among Adolescent Girls-The HERizon Project. Children (Basel). 2021 Jan 7;8(1):31. doi: 10.3390/children8010031.
Cowley ES, Watson PM, Foweather L, Belton S, Mansfield C, Whitcomb-Khan G, Cacciatore I, Thompson A, Thijssen D, Wagenmakers AJM. Formative Evaluation of a Home-Based Physical Activity Intervention for Adolescent Girls-The HERizon Project: A Randomised Controlled Trial. Children (Basel). 2021 Jan 22;8(2):76. doi: 10.3390/children8020076.
Other Identifiers
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HERizonProject2
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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