=African Americans are affected by cancer and heart disease more than whites, yet dietary interventions are not very culturally sensitive for African Americans.
The aims of this church-based study are: 1. to identify barriers and motivators on dietary change among African Americans; 2. to use the barriers and motivators to develop culturally sensitive ways to increase knowledge, and promote attitude and dietary behavior change (lower fat, increase fiber and variety of fruits and vegetables; 3. to evaluate the effectiveness of the interventions on achievement and adherence to the NCI guidelines using both process and outcome evaluation; and 4. to examine the effect of dietary changes on selected psychosocial, biochemical and anthropometrical parameters. The n = 1800 African America congregants will be 18 years old and over, from lower to upper SES with 30 participants from each of 10 churches in 6 North Carolina communities. One demonstration church will help pilot test the intervention aspects based on known barriers and motivators and develop intervention aspects based on barriers and motivators newly identified by qualitative methods. Three counties each will be randomly assigned to early and delayed interventions based on the Health Behavior in Cancer Prevention Model nested in the Stages of Readiness for Change in the context of the PRECEDE Mode. Congregation level interventions include educational food events, health fairs, and pastoral assistance with bulletins, sermons, and counseling techniques to support dietary change efforts by congregants. Small group interventions include kitchen committee workshops and a congregant speaker's bureau. At the individual level a computer-tailored person bulletin and self-help """"""""Food for Health"""""""" packet will assist lay health counselors, while inspirational booklets and audiotapes tailored to stages of change will use Scriptures, testimonials, and music to promote adherence to the NCI guidelines. Measures include Dietary Risk Assessment, a food frequency questionnaire, waist-hip measures, body mass index and serum cholesterol, vitamins A and E, carotenoids, sex hormone binding globulin, and hormones (estradiol and testosterone). Qualitative and quantitative data will be analyzed with applicable techniques. After intervention, congregations will be more knowledgeable about food-related diseases; key groups will cook healthier; individuals will have healthier lifetime eating patterns.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01CA073981-06S1
Application #
6321494
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG2 (01))
Project Start
1996-09-04
Project End
2003-12-31
Budget Start
2000-07-01
Budget End
2003-12-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$48,806
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
078861598
City
Chapel Hill
State
NC
Country
United States
Zip Code
27599
Corbie-Smith, Giselle; Ammerman, Alice S; Katz, Mira L et al. (2003) Trust, benefit, satisfaction, and burden: a randomized controlled trial to reduce cancer risk through African-American churches. J Gen Intern Med 18:531-41
Ammerman, Alice; Corbie-Smith, Giselle; St George, Diane Marie M et al. (2003) Research expectations among African American church leaders in the PRAISE! project: a randomized trial guided by community-based participatory research. Am J Public Health 93:1720-7