Lifestyle Medicine: Establishing Clinical Approaches to Chronic Disease for Rural Patients

NCT ID: NCT06049420

Last Updated: 2025-07-25

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

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

95 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-02-01

Study Completion Date

2027-09-01

Brief Summary

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Developed nations worldwide are currently enduring a health crisis, as chronic diseases continue to decrease quality of life and promote additional disease states or even death for much of the population. Rural populations are at a particular disadvantage, as they lack access to health clubs, wellness programs and similar resources that are more available in urban areas. Although pharmaceutical therapies have continued to show therapeutic advancements, the rates of disease onset and death from chronic disease has not seen similar improvements, and in fact continue to worsen. Excitingly, significant evidence has been published demonstrating an affordable, effective treatment to directly treat and prevent these chronic diseases, but few have demonstrated successful implementation of this therapy, which is improved lifestyle. Specifically, physical activity and healthy body composition are powerful therapeutics that have been demonstrated to effectively combat and prevent chronic diseases. Additionally, improving these lifestyle factors are often more effective than pharmaceutical interventions without the wide range of side effects. Unfortunately, barriers exist on multiple tiers in the practice of family medicine that demote the implementation of lifestyle medicine. To better serve patients at risk of, or suffering from chronic disease, the investigators are seeking to establish a lifestyle medicine prescription program for rural West Virginia. This program will provide patient education on the benefits of physical activity, body composition, and help patients identify strategies to implement healthy lifestyle choices that can be sustainable for the long-term. Patients will be advised on local opportunities to increase physical activity (yoga studio, martial arts, fitness facilities, aquatic center, etc.) and provided access to the facilities they are most likely to adhere to regularly. They will also be provided training on exercise techniques, equipment, and facilities to increase familiarity and comfort in these settings.

Detailed Description

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Patients will have the option to opt-in to this program if they receive a referral from their primary care physician at the Robert C. Byrd Clinic (RCBC). The referral period will be one month long, followed by 3 months of wellness facility access (intervention period). This pilot program will be restricted to adults (18-64 years old) with two or more diagnosed chronic diseases. Program admittance will be restricted to patients with diseases that have sufficient evidence for the efficacy of exercise therapy. As patients will be referred to the program, they will all have physician consent to participate in supervised physical activity. Standard care will proceed as determined by the primary care physician, as this program will be adjunctive treatment. As patient recruitment is contingent on physician referrals, the investigators have established a strong network with the family care physicians and administration from RCBC, and they are very confident that this program will be in high demand. Physicians will be reminded of the recruitment time 1-2 times/month for the 3 months preceding the start date by email, personal communication, and lunch seminars. Prior to accessing the wellness facility, each patient will be scheduled for an intake meeting. This intake meeting will be used to collect patient information (such as vital signs, morphometrics, demographics, physical activity history and readiness, health history, etc.), and understand patient goals (weight loss, glucose management, pain relief, blood pressure management, etc.). A patient questionnaire will be developed for this meeting, and patients will also fill out a physical activity readiness questionnaire. Motivational interviewing techniques will be implemented to promote adherence to the program. Individualized goals will be determined and recorded. Patient preferences such as individual training/coaching vs. group fitness will also be determined. Following the intake meeting, each patient will be advised on how they may best reach their goals, and support will be provided by the PI or a trained medical student for implementation of physical activity. The wellness facility (Greenbrier Valley Fitness) was specifically chosen as it offers a wide variety of exercise equipment and activities including strength training, cross training, group fitness, yoga, and many others. The PI or student research technicians will be present for questions, coaching, and monitoring at all times when the patient is being active. Each patient will be provided with personalized exercise therapy that is best suited for their personal goals and disease states.

An overarching goal is for each patient to achieve 150 minutes per week of moderate to vigorous physical activity. This benchmark was chosen as it is the current recommendation from the CDC \[1\], and has been demonstrated to be therapeutic for all, and curative for some, of the chronic diseases mentioned above \[2,3\]. Importantly, some patients may not make this goal within the allotted time-frame depending on their current fitness and disease states. In order to assess adherence and attrition, the investigators will have to assess individuals based on their individualized goals. Any participant that fails to attend \>50% of their scheduled activities, or fails to show up at least once in the last 15 days of the study will count as drop-outs.

Data collected on patients will only occur after their referral to our program, so that no patient data will be shared between institutions (WVSOM and the Robert C. Byrd Clinic) and so that the investigators can properly deliver informed consent to patients that are willing to have their data used for research purposes. GraphPad Prism and excel software will be used to store and analyze the data, using the descriptive statistics and computational functions to provide count data and attrition rates. Additional analyses of factors such as disease prevalence, demographics, age, gender, and appropriate interactions may also be assessed contingent on the study population.

Conditions

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Obesity Hyperlipidemias Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Hypertension Coronary Heart Disease Heart Failure Depression, Anxiety Type II Diabetes Metabolic Syndrome

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Participants will be able to opt-in to the protocol for adjunctive treatment, and their outcome measures will be assessed relative to similar patients that do not opt-in to the intervention (standard care).
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Active

participants that have received a referral, and opt-in for the adjunctive treatment plan

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Lifestyle counseling and coaching

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Each participant will be provided with personalized exercise therapy that is best suited for their personal goals and disease states. Participants in this study will be encouraged to establish accountability through setting SMART goals, and through monitoring their activity using wearable fitness technology provided to them. This program will also aim to create a sense of community as group activity classes will be available for those that wish to attend. Individualized exercise/physical activity prescriptions will be provided and discussed.

Interventions

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Lifestyle counseling and coaching

Each participant will be provided with personalized exercise therapy that is best suited for their personal goals and disease states. Participants in this study will be encouraged to establish accountability through setting SMART goals, and through monitoring their activity using wearable fitness technology provided to them. This program will also aim to create a sense of community as group activity classes will be available for those that wish to attend. Individualized exercise/physical activity prescriptions will be provided and discussed.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Program admittance will be restricted to patients with 2+ diagnosed diseases that have sufficient evidence for the efficacy of exercise therapy (obesity, hyperlipidemia, metabolic syndrome, polycystic ovarian syndrome, type II diabetes, hypertension, coronary heart disease, heart failure, depression, anxiety)
* physician referral required

Exclusion Criteria

* no chronic disease diagnosis, lack of physician referral, unwillingness to participate.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

64 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Christopher Pankey

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Christopher L Pankey, Ph.D.

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine

Locations

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West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine

Lewisburg, West Virginia, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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United States

Central Contacts

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Christopher L Pankey, Ph.D.

Role: CONTACT

3047936576

Facility Contacts

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Dovenia Ponnoth, Ph.D.

Role: primary

3046476297

Peter Feltman

Role: backup

3046476284

References

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Palakodeti S, Uratsu CS, Schmittdiel JA, Grant RW. Changes in physical activity among adults with diabetes: a longitudinal cohort study of inactive patients with Type 2 diabetes who become physically active. Diabet Med. 2015 Aug;32(8):1051-7. doi: 10.1111/dme.12748. Epub 2015 Apr 10.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 25764298 (View on PubMed)

Hupin D, Roche F, Gremeaux V, Chatard JC, Oriol M, Gaspoz JM, Barthelemy JC, Edouard P. Even a low-dose of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity reduces mortality by 22% in adults aged >/=60 years: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Sports Med. 2015 Oct;49(19):1262-7. doi: 10.1136/bjsports-2014-094306. Epub 2015 Aug 3.

Reference Type BACKGROUND
PMID: 26238869 (View on PubMed)

Related Links

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https://www.cdc.gov/physicalactivity/index.html

\[1\] CDC. Physical Activity. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Published July 25, 2022. Accessed October 7, 2022.

Other Identifiers

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R010422CP

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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