Improved physical activity (PA) and dietary behaviors show great promise to reduce risk of cancers, CVD, NIDDM and other diseases. Improvements in PA and nutrition are particularly important for the overweight, a condition now affecting more than 50 percent of Americans. There are few effective programs for treating overweight in primary care. In this project we will evaluate an integrated clinical and home- based intervention to improve PA and dietary behaviors in overweight (BMI 25-29.9) women. PACE+ has three integrated components, a computer assessment and action planner, provider counseling; and 12 months of extended phone and mail contact. Pilot study results (n=173) demonstrate that PACE+ shows substantial promise in improving dietary and PA behaviors We will recruit 360 overweight women age 18 to 45 seen in 4 healthcare settings. Subjects will be randomly assigned to PACE+ or a usual care, delayed treatment control comparison condition. PACE+ targets three primary and three secondary behaviors: Primary: a) dietary quality (fruits and vegetables, vitamin C, carotenoids, and fiber); b) total dietary fat as a percent of energy consumed; and c) energy expenditure from moderate and vigorous physical activity during leisure-time. Secondary: a) recreational media use; b) overeating; c) saturated fat as percent of energy consumed. PACE+ also assesses stage of change and psychosocial mediators of behavior change. The PACE+ computer program guides patients to select one dietary and one PA target behavior for which they develop action or maintenance plans to discuss with the provider. The provider endorses or modifies the action plan and encourages participation in the extended phone and mail intervention. Phone counseling, mail and print materials guide the patient to use cognitive and behavioral skills to make changes in target behaviors. At six months subjects are reassessed over the phone and then continue to receive stage-appropriate intervention to address their new diet and PA goals. Primary outcomes ((a) a combined measure of energy expended in moderate and vigorous physical activity during leisure; ) an index of dietary quality encompassing increased fruits and vegetables and nutrient indicators of these foods; and (c) total dietary fat as a percent of energy consumed) will be assessed at baseline and 12 months with 7-day PA recall and food frequency questionnaires. Secondary outcomes and mediators of behavior change will be measured at baseline, 6, 12 and 24 months. Secondary outcomes include objective and self-report measures of PA and recreational media use and self-reported dietary behaviors (overeating; saturated fat intake as a percent of total energy consumed), BMI, skinfolds, waist circumference, psychosocial mediators of change. Exploratory assessment of plasma carotenoids and 24-hour dietary recall will be performed on a sub-sample of subjects to validate self report measures. The PACE+ intervention is particularly innovative in that three components - computer, primary care provider counseling, and an extended home-based intervention - are unified through a common theoretical framework.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
3R01CA085873-02S1
Application #
6615913
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1 (01))
Program Officer
Rosenfeld, Bobby
Project Start
2001-09-01
Project End
2005-08-31
Budget Start
2002-09-01
Budget End
2003-08-31
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$24,824
Indirect Cost
Name
San Diego State University
Department
Miscellaneous
Type
Other Domestic Higher Education
DUNS #
073371346
City
San Diego
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92182
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Robinson, A H; Norman, G J; Sallis, J F et al. (2008) Validating stage of change measures for physical activity and dietary behaviors for overweight women. Int J Obes (Lond) 32:1137-44
Kerr, Jacqueline; Patrick, Kevin; Norman, Greg et al. (2008) Randomized control trial of a behavioral intervention for overweight women: impact on depressive symptoms. Depress Anxiety 25:555-8
Sanchez, Alvaro; Norman, Gregory J; Sallis, James F et al. (2008) Patterns and correlates of multiple risk behaviors in overweight women. Prev Med 46:196-202
Norman, Gregory J; Adams, Marc A; Calfas, Karen J et al. (2007) A randomized trial of a multicomponent intervention for adolescent sun protection behaviors. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 161:146-52
Norman, Gregory J; Sallis, James F; Gaskins, Ronnesia (2005) Comparability and reliability of paper- and computer-based measures of psychosocial constructs for adolescent physical activity and sedentary behaviors. Res Q Exerc Sport 76:315-23
Hagler, Athena S; Norman, Gregory J; Radick, Lindsey R et al. (2005) Comparability and reliability of paper- and computer-based measures of psychosocial constructs for adolescent fruit and vegetable and dietary fat intake. J Am Diet Assoc 105:1758-64
Norman, Gregory J; Schmid, Beatrice A; Sallis, James F et al. (2005) Psychosocial and environmental correlates of adolescent sedentary behaviors. Pediatrics 116:908-16

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