Pacific Islander Physical Activity Project

NCT ID: NCT06523946

Last Updated: 2024-08-02

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

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

150 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-08-09

Study Completion Date

2028-06-30

Brief Summary

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This proposed longitudinal study will examine the influences of neighborhood factors and momentary contextual and psychosocial factors, which the investigators call acute precipitants, on physical activity (PA) adoption and maintenance among Pacific Islanders (PcIs). Specifically, the investigators will enroll 150 sedentary PcI adults and examine their PA adoption and maintenance based on measurements at five separate weeks during a 20-month period. The investigators will use MotionSense, an innovative and proven mHealth kit developed by team members, Global Positioning System (GPS), and ecological momentary assessment to measure PA and its key determinants. Our central hypotheses are that individual and neighborhood factors are associated with PA adoption and maintenance among previously sedentary PcIs, and that psychosocial precipitants mediate these associations.

Detailed Description

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Pacific Islanders (PcIs), one of the fastest growing racial/ethnic groups in the United States, bear the highest obesity rate among all racial/ethnic groups in the United States and suffer from a disproportionate burden of health disparities in cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and cancers. PA is important for addressing these disparities because regular PA decreases obesity and reduces the risks of these diseases. In general, PcIs are less physically active than non-Hispanic Whites, with the majority not meeting nationally-recommended PA levels. However, few studies have investigated the underlying mechanism(s) of PA behavior change for PcIs. Recent research highlighted the importance of contextual social and built environments on PA participation among racial/ethnic minorities and the necessity of understanding psychosocial pathways to PA behaviors. However, research in this area has been significantly limited by the lack of data measured at micro timescales (e.g., across minutes, hours, or days) that can capture the dynamic interactions between contextual factors and PA behavior. The paucity of research on PA behaviors among PcIs and the lack of micro timescale data for understanding PA mechanisms have hampered the search for effective policies and interventions to reduce PA-related health disparities for this high-risk population.

Our long-term goal is to use mobile Health (mHealth) technologies to help PcIs increase their PA levels and thereby to reduce their health disparities. This proposed longitudinal study will examine the influences of neighborhood factors and momentary contextual and psychosocial factors, which the investigators call acute precipitants, on PA adoption and maintenance among PcIs. Specifically, the investigators will enroll 150 sedentary PcI adults and examine their PA adoption and maintenance based on measurements at five separate weeks during a 20-month period. The investigators will use MotionSense, an innovative and proven mHealth kit developed by team members, GPS, and ecological momentary assessment to measure PA and its key determinants. An innovation of this mHealth system is that it can continuously measure PA and contextual and psychosocial acute precipitants in natural environments, therefore providing the much-needed micro timescale data for studying the dynamic nature of PA behavioral change. Our preliminary studies have confirmed the feasibility of using this system to measure PA and PA correlates. Our multidisciplinary team has expertise in PA behavior analysis, PA intervention, mHealth technologies, geographical analysis, and health psychology.

Our central hypotheses are that individual and neighborhood factors are associated with PA adoption and maintenance among previously sedentary PcIs, and that psychosocial precipitants mediate these associations. The investigators have designed the following two aims to test these central hypotheses.

Aim 1: To examine the influences of neighborhood factors on PA adoption and maintenance among sedentary PcI adults. The investigators hypothesize that lower levels of PA adoption and maintenance are associated with disadvantageous neighborhood factors (e.g., lack of access to PA facilities, higher levels of poverty, lower social cohesion) after controlling for individual-level factors. The investigators will first define PA adoption and maintenance based on the change of PA level across the five measurement weeks for each participant, and then link them to neighborhood factors using linear mixed effects models.

Aim 2: To determine the dynamic relationships between contextual and psychosocial acute precipitants and PA.

2.a. The investigators hypothesize that lower frequency and duration of PA are associated with disadvantageous acute precipitants (e.g., decreased access to PA facilities, increased negative affect, and decreased self-efficacy); and the associations vary between stages of PA adoption and maintenance. The investigators will use the micro timescale data measured by our mHealth system to construct PA indicators and acute precipitants. Then, an innovative dynamic prediction model will be used to investigate their temporal, dynamic associations.

2.b. The investigators hypothesize that psychosocial acute precipitants (e.g., self-efficacy, negative affect) mediate the influence of contextual acute precipitants (e.g., access to PA resources) on PA, should the investigators find any significant associations between the latter two.

This is an observational study (rather than an interventional study) that contains a physical activity intervention. The primary goal is not to evaluate the effectiveness of the PA intervention in increasing PA levels, but how neighborhood and contextual factors influence PA adoption and maintenance. The investigators use the PA intervention to stimulate PA engagement for all participants so that the investigators can observe their PA behavior change in a real-world setting.

Since the purpose of the study is not to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention, it does not fulfill the third criterion of the NIH definition of clinical trials and should be considered an observational study.

Conditions

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Physical Inactivity

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Study Groups

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Pacific Islander (PcI) Adults

The investigators will enroll 150 sedentary Pacific Islander (PcI) adults. The investigators will first use an evidence-based physical activity (PA) program tool on all participants to stimulate their PA levels, and then study how contextual and psychosocial factors influence PA initiation and maintenance. The investigators will assess participants for 5 separate weeks during a 20-month span using real-time, field-based, state-of-the-art methodologies consisting of MotionSense (a well-validated on-body mobile sensor system), ecological momentary assessment (EMA), and the Global Positioning System (GPS).

Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) (shortened)

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The investigators will adapt the protocol of the 'Ohana project. The 'Ohana protocol was developed based on CDC's Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) curriculum and designed to fit PcI's cultural background. It includes a 8-lesson curriculum delivered in 8 weeks (shortened from the original 16-lesson, 24-week core curriculum of DPP while retaining all original foci and behavior change strategies). Specifically, the first four lessons, delivered every week, focus on getting the participants started on increasing PA and improving diet (e.g., introduction; getting started on PA and diet; utilizing goal setting; making the process fun). The second four classes will be taught every other week and will focus on how to handle various challenges involved in maintaining healthy lifestyle behaviors. The investigators will deliver the curriculum in group settings of 15 people in a separate room in the National Tongan American Society.

Interventions

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Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) (shortened)

The investigators will adapt the protocol of the 'Ohana project. The 'Ohana protocol was developed based on CDC's Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) curriculum and designed to fit PcI's cultural background. It includes a 8-lesson curriculum delivered in 8 weeks (shortened from the original 16-lesson, 24-week core curriculum of DPP while retaining all original foci and behavior change strategies). Specifically, the first four lessons, delivered every week, focus on getting the participants started on increasing PA and improving diet (e.g., introduction; getting started on PA and diet; utilizing goal setting; making the process fun). The second four classes will be taught every other week and will focus on how to handle various challenges involved in maintaining healthy lifestyle behaviors. The investigators will deliver the curriculum in group settings of 15 people in a separate room in the National Tongan American Society.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* age 18 years of age or older (because children and adolescents are different from adults in terms of PA level, PA mechanisms, psychosocial factors, and measurement accuracy);
* being Tongan American (TA); being currently sedentary which is defined as self-reported PA less than 3 days/week for less than 20 minutes/day over the last 6 month;
* no underlying functional impairment;
* valid home address;
* functioning telephone number;
* can speak, read, and write in English;
* marginal or adequate health literacy.

Exclusion Criteria

* currently in a physical activity program or participated in a physical activity program in the past year;
* have a pacemaker or implanted cardiac device;
* have any dietary/exercise restrictions or limitations, and/or co-morbid conditions that would have precluded them from fully participating in the study;
* physically unable to wear equipment and provide a good reading or use a smartphone;
* pregnancy or lactation;
* with active diagnoses of major depression, cognitive impairment (of any etiology), or any functional impairment; or any uncontrolled medical or psychiatric problem.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Ohio State University

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

National Tongan American Society

UNKNOWN

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Utah

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Neng Wan

Associate Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Neng Wan, Ph.D.

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Associate Professor

Central Contacts

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Neng Wan, Ph.D.

Role: CONTACT

8015853972

Other Identifiers

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R37CA276365

Identifier Type: NIH

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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