Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT05367544
NA

Equity in Prevention and Progression of Hypertension by Addressing Barriers to Nutrition and Physical activitY

Sponsor: University of Alabama at Birmingham

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The goal of this study is to test an intervention to prevent high blood pressure among rural, Black adults living in Alabama. Black adults in this region have one of the highest rates of high blood pressure in the US. Eating fruits and vegetables and exercising daily lowers the chance of getting high blood pressure. Many problems get in the way of eating a healthy diet and exercising like a lack of grocery stores with fresh foods, few gyms, little money, lack of transportation, and limited support for keeping healthy habits. One place where many Black adults in rural Alabama meet weekly and feel supported is their church. The investigators will connect with 30 churches in rural Alabama. The investigators plan to hold health fairs to find 12 Black adults from each church with blood pressure that is higher than normal but not high enough to need blood pressure lowering medications. The investigators will randomly select 15 churches to get group health education and tablets to access online cooking shows and exercise classes. Adults in the other 15 churches will get support from a health coach over the telephone to help set and meet diet and physical activity goals as well as the group health education and tablets to access online cooking shows and exercise classes. In this study, the investigators will ask church members to sign up to be a health coach. These 15 churches will also get money to help bring healthy foods and/or physical activity opportunities to their communities. The investigative team will train 2 to 3 of their church members to learn how to coach others to eat more healthy food and be more physically active. This study answers two questions. 1) Will this intervention designed to reduce barriers to a healthy lifestyle lower blood pressure among rural, Black adults? 2) Can churches and participants complete the whole two-year study, and can the intervention be used in other communities in a cost-effective way to improve blood pressure? This project will add to the health equity mission of the American Heart Association by finding out if an intervention using health coaches lowers blood pressure among rural Black adults.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

19 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

528

Start Date

2022-08-13

Completion Date

2026-09

Last Updated

2026-03-06

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Health Education

All participants will receive education regardless of randomization status. On the day of enrollment, participants will be invited to attend education modules focused on HTN risk, diet, physical activity, stress management, and goal setting. Participants will also have access to culturally relevant, weekly online sessions, alternating between cooking shows and exercise

BEHAVIORAL

Individual-Level Peer Support

Participants will receive bi-weekly peer support calls for 6 months, followed by monthly calls for another 6 months.

BEHAVIORAL

Community-Level Peer Support

Church Leadership in churches randomized to intervention will identify 2-3 Peer Health Advocates from the church who will receive training on ways to promote a culture of health, encouraging church members to attend on-line cooking shows and exercise sessions. After training, these individuals will also work with Church Leadership to form a committee that will develop a project (e.g., community food pantry, farmer's market, Zumba instruction, small church gym) aimed at overcoming structural barriers to healthy behaviors. Each church will receive a small stipend for their project. Churches randomized to education alone will receive the community-level intervention after 12 months of participation in the study (delayed intervention)

Locations (1)

University of Alabama At Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama, United States