DPPFit is a Healthy Lifestyle Intervention designed to reformat the effective strategies of the Diabetes Prevention Program (NDPP) into a tool for use in a primary care setting. DPPFit is a 16-week technology-based intervention for diabetes prevention. In keeping with the National DPP educational sessions, the intervention weeks follow the order and presentation of the N-DPP 16 session topics. The goal is to develop a pragmatic translation of the DPP that is effective in the real-world setting of primary care clinic. The hope is that in doing so, those at risk of developing type II diabetes mellitus will have evidenced-based prevention methods at their disposal.
DPPFit is an HLI designed to translate the effective strategies of the National Diabetes Prevention Program (N-DPP) into a tool for use in a primary care setting. The 16-week intervention follows the order of the 16 sessions that make up the core components of the traditional DPP. The novelty in this application is the intervention delivery, in addition to the use of technology to supplement resource and time intensive DPP behavioral strategies. The entire intervention is delivered through automated text messages (SMS/MMS). For any given week, the daily text messages for that week reflect the core session of the DPP (i.e DPPFit Week 1 texts correspond to DPP Session 1). In addition to the automated daily messages, participants are issued a Fitbit and assisted in setting up the Fitbit App on their smart phones. The Fitbit App is considered a standalone mHealth App. The fitness tracker and companion App allow participants to set goals and track food and physical activity. The content of the text messaging is almost entirely from the N-DPP participant notebook (2012). Exceptions to this are a series of prompts to cue participant to use the Fitbit and/or Fitbit App to support the session. These include topics about setting goals in the Fitbit App, how to track food using the App, or how to connect with friends and do challenges on Fitbit. To be sustainable and feasible in a primary care setting, remote delivery of intervention materials and components is a necessary part of any evidence-based tool to address diabetes prevention. This automated, remote dissemination, technology-based application of the N-DPP components means that intervention delivery and protocol are feasible methods to address diabetes prevention in light of the ongoing Covid-19 health crisis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
32
Participants issued Fitbit Device and set up Fitbit App. They are then enrolled in the automated text messaging platform. Day 1 of the intervention begins the Monday after consent. All consented participants receive the full intervention.
Augusta University - General Internal Medicine Clinic
Augusta, Georgia, United States
Weight Loss
Weight Loss by % of change and total weight change (kg)
Time frame: 12 Months
Physical Activity
Physical activity days/week, change \> 10% of PA, Kcal/week
Time frame: 6 months
Inactivity
Change in Sedentary Time, Mins/day
Time frame: 6 months
Health Related Quality of Life
MOS SF-20 / MOS Social Support Scale
Time frame: 6 months
Hemoglobin A1c
Change in % of HbA1c at 1 year follow-up
Time frame: 12 months
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