Nearly 8 in 10 Veterans meet criteria for overweight/obesity. Three evidence-based treatment options are available within VA (behavioral weight management \[MOVE!\], obesity medications, and bariatric surgery). However, all treatments are significantly underutilized. This study will evaluate the effectiveness of a novel intervention designed to increase obesity treatment initiation and subsequently weight loss within VA. The intervention, Teaching Obesity Treatment Options to Adult Learners (TOTAL), involves an educational video and multiple motivational sessions delivered via telemedicine. If effective, TOTAL could be implemented throughout VA without requiring significant resources and could be integrated into the existing VA behavioral weight management program, MOVE!, which is present at nearly every VA medical center.
Background: Nearly 80% of Veterans meet criteria for overweight (body mass index \[BMI\] of 25-29.9 kg/m2) or obesity (BMI 30). VA offers three evidence-based obesity treatments at little to no cost to Veterans: MOVE! (to improve dietary intake and physical activity through behavioral modification); obesity medications; and bariatric surgery, but all are significantly underutilized: \<10% of Veterans with obesity participate in MOVE!; 2% receive obesity medications; and 0.3% of those who meet BMI criteria for bariatric surgery (BMI 35) undergo it. There is an urgent need to increase use of all three treatments to improve Veteran health. Significance/Impact: Nearly 4,000,000 Veterans meet BMI criteria for overweight/obesity. It is essential that Veterans with overweight/obesity are aware of the three treatment options and are motivated to pursue them. Currently, no interventions in VA seek to increase use of all three evidence-based obesity treatment options for Veterans not currently participating in MOVE!. The TOTAL intervention (Teaching Obesity Treatment Options to Adults Learners), if effective, would increase obesity treatment initiation for Veterans, lead to greater weight loss, and improve quality of life. Given that TOTAL is deliverable via VA telemedicine, it could be implemented throughout the VA healthcare system without requiring significant resources and could be integrated into the existing VA behavioral weight management program, MOVE!. Innovation: The research in this proposal would be the first adequately powered RCT in VA testing an intervention to increase use of all three evidence-based obesity treatments: MOVE!, obesity medications, and bariatric surgery. It would leverage the power of the VA electronic health record and would improve access to care by expanding use of a recently developed telemedicine technology - VA Video Connect (VVC) - which was developed by VA researchers. It could be implemented and disseminated efficiently within VA given that MOVE! is available at every VAMC and is supported by NCP. Specific Aims: Aim 1: Compare the effectiveness of TOTAL vs. usual care for increasing obesity treatment initiation among Veterans with overweight/obesity who are not participating in MOVE!; Aim 2: Compare the effectiveness of TOTAL vs. usual care for increasing sustained MOVE! participation, receipt of an obesity medication prescription or bariatric surgery referral, and weight loss; Aim 3: Inform future dissemination efforts of TOTAL via interviews with key stakeholders, a "Reach" analysis, and cost analysis. Methodology: Study population: Veterans at two VAMCs, age 18-75 with a BMI 30 or 27-29.9 + an obesity related comorbidity who have not had a MOVE! visit within the past 12 months and thus are not participating in obesity treatment will participate in the RCT; Intervention: The TOTAL intervention consists of an 18-minute obesity treatment educational video and three motivational sessions (all delivered via VA Video Connect \[VVC\]); Comparison: Usual care (Veterans who have not had a MOVE! visit in the previous 12 months); Outcomes: MOVE! initiation, sustained MOVE! participation, obesity medication use, bariatric surgery referral, weight change; Timing: Primary and secondary outcomes will be measured 18 months post-randomization. Implementation/Next Steps: Facilitators and barriers to TOTAL implementation will be assessed in Aim 3 interviews with Veteran, provider, and operations stakeholders using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR). The investigators will also perform "reach" and cost analyses. The investigators will collaborate with NCP to disseminate TOTAL to all VAMCs that have a MOVE! program. The National MOVE! Director will present study results on a national MOVE! call and make presentation materials available on the national MOVE! SharePoint dissemination site. The National MOVE! Director will support MOVE! coordinators who work directly with health behavior coordinators at every VAMC with MOVE!. The study team will consider partnering with NCP to conduct a QUERI National Partnered Evaluation evaluating how TOTAL can be implemented throughout VA.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
440
TOTAL includes both video component and motivational telemedicine calls delivered via VA Video Connect (VVC) by a study interventionist. We will invite study participants to watch the 18-minute video at least once. The motivational component of TOTAL will consist of three telemedicine-based (VVC), one-on-one, 30-minute calls at 1 week, 6 months, and 12 months after randomization. This timing was selected so Veterans would have regular interactions with the interventionist within one year of initiating the intervention. Each motivational session will be tailored to where Veterans are in the treatment initiation process. Electronic outcome assessment surveys will be sent to the participants at baseline, at each motivational telemedicine visit, and for the 18 month assessment.
The usual care group will be electronically sent the 1-week, 6-month, 12-month, 18-month assessments. All usual care participants will be offered the opportunity to watch the educational video component of TOTAL after the final outcome assessment is performed (18 months post-randomization). Veterans in the usual care arm will also have access to the MOVE! program via referrals from the PCP or self-referral to MOVE!. If they initiate treatment in MOVE!, they may progress through MOVE! and receive obesity medications or be referred for bariatric surgery if they choose to do so.
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, West Los Angeles, CA
West Los Angeles, California, United States
William S. Middleton Memorial Veterans Hospital, Madison, WI
Madison, Wisconsin, United States
Obesity treatment initiation
Attendance at an individual or group MOVE! visit within 18 months of randomization. Assessed at baseline and 18 months via VA electronic health record review.
Time frame: 18 months
Sustained obesity treatment
Attendance at 12 or more MOVE! visits (individual or group) over 18 months. Assessed via VA electronic health record review at baseline and 18 months.
Time frame: 18 months
Obesity medication initiation
Presence of an obesity medication on the active medications list within the VA electronic health record. Assessed at baseline and 18months
Time frame: 18 months
Bariatric surgery referral
Receipt of a bariatric surgery referral. Assessed at baseline and 18 months via VA electronic health record review.
Time frame: 18 months
Weight Change
Patient will weigh themselves on a calibrated scale provided by the study. Patients will enter their weight in an electronic survey sent to them every 6 months (baseline, 6 months, 12months, and 18 months). Participants will also send a picture of their weight on the scale to verify the number.
Time frame: 18 months
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