Patients with co-occurring health risk behaviors suffer greater morbidity, disability, and premature death. The Pro-Change Population Health Solution (PCPHS) is a suite of mobile tools designed to assist patients and primary care providers (PCPs) in applying evidence-based principles of health behavior change to reduce four cancer risk behaviors-cigarette smoking, risky drinking, noncompliance with national guidelines for physical activity, and overweight and obesity-and depression among at-risk patients. The intervention is based on the Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change (TTM, the "stage model") and includes computer-tailored interventions and text messages for patients and a clinical dashboard for providers. The efficacy of the intervention will be assessed in a cluster-randomized trial involving 780 patients recruited from 12 federally qualified health centers randomly assigned to intervention or usual care.
A cluster-randomized design will be used to assess the efficacy of the PCPHS intervention for multiple behavior change for cancer prevention by comparing 6- and 12-month outcomes among 780 primary care patients recruited by 12 federally qualified health clinics randomly assigned to intervention or usual care. A Multiattribute Utility Measurement Approach will be used to ensure that clinics assigned to the two conditions are approximately equivalent on clinic size, patient demographics, and cancer risk behaviors (e.g., rates of smoking, overweight, and obesity). The most similar clinics will be paired, and one clinic within each pair will be assigned to intervention, and the other to usual care. Patients with an upcoming appointment and who meet study inclusion criteria will be invited to participate in the study, which will begin with an online baseline survey. In addition, patients in the intervention group will complete an online health risk intervention (HRI) that assesses and intervenes on the four cancer risk behaviors targeted in the intervention-cigarette smoking, risky drinking, noncompliance with national guidelines for physical activity, and overweight and obesity-as well depression. It will also assess whether participants have received cancer screenings recommended by age and gender. After the HRI session, intervention participants will have access to the TTM CTIs targeting their risk factors during the next six months. Patients assigned to the usual care condition will receive care as usual. Providers at the six clinics assigned to intervention will receive training on the TTM and the clinical dashboard. They will have access to the dashboard via the patient electronic medical record (EMR) during the intervention period, and will be expected to use the dashboard to deliver the one-on-one component of the TTM intervention. The clinical dashboard will: 1. Report whether the participant has received recommended cancer screenings; 2. Summarize data on targeted behavioral risks for cancer; 3. Summarize data on level of depression; 4. For each cancer risk behavior, show stage of change for meeting recommended guidelines; if at least mild depression show stage of change for using healthy strategies to manage depression; and 5. For each cancer risk behavior and depression management, provide stage-matched scripts providers can use to help participants progress to the next stage of change or to prevent relapse to an earlier stage. Intervention group providers will deliver the dashboard-guided session at the patient's next clinic visit. The dashboard will be updated as the participant completes CTI sessions post-visit. Study participants who return to the clinic for any reason during the intervention period will be flagged, and the provider will use the dashboard to review progress and deliver updated stage-matched guidance. All study participants will receive an online survey to assess outcomes at 6 and 12 months follow-up. Participants who don't complete the online survey within two weeks will be contacted by a survey research company to complete the survey by phone.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
780
Mobile-delivered health risk intervention (HRI), computer-tailored interventions (CTIs), text messages; provider-delivered one-on-one session guided by clinical dashboard
Primary care as usual
Connecticut Health Center, Inc.
Middletown, Connecticut, United States
RECRUITINGPro-Change Behavior Systems, Inc.
South Kingstown, Rhode Island, United States
RECRUITINGChange in number of cancer risk behaviors
Change in number of cancer risk behaviors will be computed by taking the difference in the count of the four cancer risk behaviors (cigarette smoking, risky drinking, noncompliance with national guidelines for physical activity, and overweight and obesity) from baseline to 12 months follow-up. At each time point, the index will range from 0 to 4, with each risk behavior scored a "1" if present, and "0" if not present (Prochaska, Prochaska, \& Prochaska, 2014).
Time frame: Baseline, 12 months
Change in consumer engagement
Change in consumer engagement will be computed by taking the difference in scores on the Altarum Consumer Engagement Measure (Duke, Lynch, Smith, \& Winstanley, 2015) from baseline to 12 months follow-up. The measure assesses four dimensions of engagement in healthcare: 1) commitment, 2) informed choice, 3) navigation, and 4) ownership.
Time frame: Baseline, 12 months
Adherence with cancer screenings
Adherence with cancer screenings be the percentage of age- and gender-based U.S. Preventive Services Task Force-recommended screenings received during follow-up.
Time frame: 12 months
Change in satisfaction with medical care
Change in patient satisfaction will be computed by taking the difference in participant scores on a 1-item global rating of satisfaction with care scale from baseline to 12 months follow-up. The scale is taken from the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) survey (Agency for Healthcare Policy and Research, 1999; Hargraves, Hays, \& Cleary, 2003).
Time frame: Baseline, 12 months
Change in well-being
Change in well-being will be computed by taking the difference in the Cantril Self-Anchoring Scale (Cantril, 1965) from baseline to 12 months follow-up. The measure asks participants to imagine a ladder with steps numbered from zero to ten, with the top representing the best possible life and the bottom representing the worst possible life, and to indicate where they feel their life falls currently and where it will be in five years.
Time frame: Baseline, 12 months
Change in health-related quality of life
Change in well-being will be computed by taking the difference in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Healthy Days (2000) Core Measures from baseline to 12 months follow-up. The measures assess overall self-rated health, recent physical symptoms, recent mental and emotional distress, and recent activity limitations.
Time frame: Baseline, 12 months
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