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Promoting Employee Health Through The Worksite Food Environment (ChooseWell 365)

29. November 2021 aktualisiert von: Anne N. Thorndike, MD, MPH, Massachusetts General Hospital

This project tests a scalable and sustainable approach to weight gain prevention in a population of employees by using the worksite environment to deliver personalized feedback about worksite food purchases, daily calorie goals, social norms for healthy eating, and financial incentives for healthy food purchases. In the future, similar strategies could be adopted by other worksites, institutions, and food retailers and could contribute to the long-term environmental and social changes needed to reverse the obesity epidemic in the United States and worldwide.

The overall objective of ancillary studies added on to this project is to examine the psychological traits, cognitive skills, and genes that may influence the impact of the behavioral intervention to promote healthy diet and weight among employees at a large hospital worksite.

Studienübersicht

Status

Abgeschlossen

Detaillierte Beschreibung

Adults in the United States gain an average of 1-2 pounds a year. Interventions to prevent weight gain at the population level are needed to reverse the rising prevalence of obesity. Although individual-level interventions can result in large weight changes among small groups of individuals, achieving changes in the population will require long-term strategies that create healthier food environments, establish new social norms, and improve motivation and skills for healthy lifestyle behaviors. The worksite is ideal for interventions to address weight and lifestyle behaviors because a majority of adults are employed, and provisions in the Affordable Care Act encourage worksite wellness. Our research team at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) has demonstrated that behavioral economics strategies, including traffic-light labels, choice architecture, social norms, and financial incentives, improve employees' healthy food choices. The proposed project will address the critical next phase of this research to determine if a worksite intervention delivered through the food environment can prevent weight gain and reduce cardiovascular risk of employees. This project builds on the established traffic-light labeling system at MGH and tests an intervention that aims to increase nutrition knowledge, motivate change in lifestyle behaviors, and promote socially normative behavior for healthier lifestyles among employees. The intervention will be integrated into the flow of the work day, thus lowering burden to employees and the employer. Study Design: In a randomized controlled trial, 600 MGH employees will be assigned to: 1) an intervention arm with automated, personalized feedback about (a) worksite food purchases and calorie and physical activity goals (weekly emails) and (b) social norm feedback plus small financial incentives for healthy food purchases (monthly letters) or 2) a control arm (standardized monthly letters). Study outcomes will be assessed at 1 year (end of intervention) and 2 year follow-up. The primary outcome is change in weight at 1 year. Secondary outcomes are cardiovascular risk factors, worksite food purchases, and dietary intake (as measured by the Healthy Eating Index). A novel exploratory outcome will be healthy food purchases of co-workers who are socially connected to study subjects. Aim 1 is to determine if employees assigned to the intervention have less weight gain and lower cardiovascular risk factors than the control group at 1 year and 2-year follow-up. Aim 2 is to determine if employees assigned to the intervention group make healthier food choices than the control group at 1 year and 2-year follow-up. Exploratory Aim 3 is to determine if employees socially connected to the intervention group make healthier worksite food choices over 1 year than employees connected to the control group. Implications: This innovative strategy utilizing personalized feedback, social norms, and financial incentives will provide a scalable and sustainable model that could be adopted in other worksite, institutional, and retail settings to prevent obesity at the population level.

The overall objective of the ancillary studies added on to this project is to examine the psychological traits, cognitive skills, and genes that may influence the impact of a behaviorally-informed intervention on dietary choices, weight, and other objective health indicators. This research will expand on the randomized trial by examining psychological traits (impulsivity, self-control, social acceptance), cognitive skills (numeracy, health literacy), and genes (97 known BMI loci) that are associated with obesity and poor health and are specifically targeted by the intervention. We will use validated measures to assess traits and skills and well-established methods for genotyping and calculating genetic risk scores. Aim 1 will determine if psychological traits moderate the behavioral intervention effects on diet and weight. Aim 2 will determine if cognitive skills moderate the behavioral intervention effects on diet and weight. Aim 3 will determine if genetic risk for obesity moderates the intervention effect on weight. In secondary analyses, potential mediators of diet and weight outcomes, including dietary intent, self-efficacy, reward sensitivity, perceived norms, and perceived stress, will be assessed. Implications: Results of this research will l will inform the future design and implementation of more effective, tailored, and sustainable population approaches for obesity prevention.

Studientyp

Interventionell

Einschreibung (Tatsächlich)

602

Phase

  • Unzutreffend

Kontakte und Standorte

Dieser Abschnitt enthält die Kontaktdaten derjenigen, die die Studie durchführen, und Informationen darüber, wo diese Studie durchgeführt wird.

Studienorte

    • Massachusetts
      • Boston, Massachusetts, Vereinigte Staaten, 02114
        • Massachusetts General Hospital

Teilnahmekriterien

Forscher suchen nach Personen, die einer bestimmten Beschreibung entsprechen, die als Auswahlkriterien bezeichnet werden. Einige Beispiele für diese Kriterien sind der allgemeine Gesundheitszustand einer Person oder frühere Behandlungen.

Zulassungskriterien

Studienberechtigtes Alter

21 Jahre bis 75 Jahre (Erwachsene, Älterer Erwachsener)

Akzeptiert gesunde Freiwillige

Ja

Studienberechtigte Geschlechter

Alle

Beschreibung

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Employee at Massachusetts General Hospital; uses hospital cafeterias at least 4 times a week and willing to pay for purchases with employee debit card.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Planning to leave employment at MGH in the next year; currently pregnant; currently participating in the MGH employee wellness program Be Fit

Studienplan

Dieser Abschnitt enthält Einzelheiten zum Studienplan, einschließlich des Studiendesigns und der Messung der Studieninhalte.

Wie ist die Studie aufgebaut?

Designdetails

  • Hauptzweck: Verhütung
  • Zuteilung: Zufällig
  • Interventionsmodell: Parallele Zuordnung
  • Maskierung: Single

Waffen und Interventionen

Teilnehmergruppe / Arm
Intervention / Behandlung
Experimental: Personalized feedback
Emails and letters providing personalized nutrition feedback about food choices and health, social norms, and financial incentives for healthy food choices
Automated personalized nutrition feedback about cafeteria food purchases (weekly); social norms and small financial incentives to promote healthy purchases (monthly)
Kein Eingriff: Control
Monthly letters with general nutrition information

Was misst die Studie?

Primäre Ergebnismessungen

Ergebnis Maßnahme
Maßnahmenbeschreibung
Zeitfenster
Weight Change
Zeitfenster: 12 months
Change in weight from baseline to 12 months
12 months

Sekundäre Ergebnismessungen

Ergebnis Maßnahme
Maßnahmenbeschreibung
Zeitfenster
Weight Change
Zeitfenster: 24 months
Change in weight from baseline to 24 months
24 months
Change in Blood Pressure
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change from baseline in mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure (BP).
12 and 24 months
Change in Total Cholesterol
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change from baseline in mean serum total cholesterol.
12 and 24 months
Change in LDL Cholesterol
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change from baseline in mean serum LDL.
12 and 24 months
Change in Triglycerides
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in mean serum triglycerides.
12 and 24 months
Change in HDL Cholesterol
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in mean serum HDL.
12 and 24 months
Change in Hemoglobin A1C
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in mean serum hemoglobin A1c.
12 and 24 months
Change in Green-labeled (Healthy) Food Purchases
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in cafeteria food purchases labeled green.
12 and 24 months
Change in Red-labeled (Unhealthy) Food Purchases
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in cafeteria food purchases labeled red.
12 and 24 months
Change in Healthy Purchasing Score
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in overall score of the healthfulness of foods purchased, weighting the proportion of red, yellow, and green foods. To calculate the score, red foods are weighted 0, yellow are weighted 0.5, and green foods are weighted 1.0. Weighted scores are multiplied x 100, and the range is from 0 (least healthy cafeteria purchases, i.e. all red) to 100 (healthiest cafeteria purchases, i.e. all green).
12 and 24 months
Change in Healthy Eating Index Score-15
Zeitfenster: 12 and 24 months
Change in Healthy Eating Index (HEI) scores. Healthy Eating Index Score is a measure of overall dietary quality that was calculated from two 24-hour dietary recalls. The range is from 0 (lowest diet quality) to 100 (highest diet quality) points.
12 and 24 months

Mitarbeiter und Ermittler

Hier finden Sie Personen und Organisationen, die an dieser Studie beteiligt sind.

Publikationen und hilfreiche Links

Die Bereitstellung dieser Publikationen erfolgt freiwillig durch die für die Eingabe von Informationen über die Studie verantwortliche Person. Diese können sich auf alles beziehen, was mit dem Studium zu tun hat.

Studienaufzeichnungsdaten

Diese Daten verfolgen den Fortschritt der Übermittlung von Studienaufzeichnungen und zusammenfassenden Ergebnissen an ClinicalTrials.gov. Studienaufzeichnungen und gemeldete Ergebnisse werden von der National Library of Medicine (NLM) überprüft, um sicherzustellen, dass sie bestimmten Qualitätskontrollstandards entsprechen, bevor sie auf der öffentlichen Website veröffentlicht werden.

Haupttermine studieren

Studienbeginn (Tatsächlich)

1. September 2016

Primärer Abschluss (Tatsächlich)

1. März 2020

Studienabschluss (Tatsächlich)

15. März 2020

Studienanmeldedaten

Zuerst eingereicht

18. Januar 2016

Zuerst eingereicht, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt hat

18. Januar 2016

Zuerst gepostet (Schätzen)

21. Januar 2016

Studienaufzeichnungsaktualisierungen

Letztes Update gepostet (Tatsächlich)

1. Dezember 2021

Letztes eingereichtes Update, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt

29. November 2021

Zuletzt verifiziert

1. November 2021

Mehr Informationen

Begriffe im Zusammenhang mit dieser Studie

Andere Studien-ID-Nummern

  • 5R01HL125486 (US NIH Stipendium/Vertrag)
  • R01DK114735 (US NIH Stipendium/Vertrag)

Diese Informationen wurden ohne Änderungen direkt von der Website clinicaltrials.gov abgerufen. Wenn Sie Ihre Studiendaten ändern, entfernen oder aktualisieren möchten, wenden Sie sich bitte an register@clinicaltrials.gov. Sobald eine Änderung auf clinicaltrials.gov implementiert wird, wird diese automatisch auch auf unserer Website aktualisiert .

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