Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
Same as current

Summary

Conditions
  • Childhood Obesity
  • Gestational Diabetes
  • Overweight and Obesity
  • Postpartum Weight Retention
  • Pregnancy Weight Gain
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: Single (Outcomes Assessor)Primary Purpose: Health Services Research

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Only males

Description

Despite two decades of public health efforts to combat obesity, rates continue to rise and racial disparities persist. There is an urgent need to re-focus obesity prevention efforts onto young adults, particularly reproductive age women. 23% of women (vs. 13% of men) gain ?20 kg from age 18 to 55 ye...

Despite two decades of public health efforts to combat obesity, rates continue to rise and racial disparities persist. There is an urgent need to re-focus obesity prevention efforts onto young adults, particularly reproductive age women. 23% of women (vs. 13% of men) gain ?20 kg from age 18 to 55 years, with the highest weight gain in African American women who gain > 1kg/year. Importantly, weight gain of ?20 kg is associated with development of type 2 diabetes (DM), other obesity-related comorbidities and greater mortality. For women who become pregnant, pregnancy provides an important opportunity for obesity and DM prevention, as excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) and pregnancy complications [e.g. gestational diabetes (GDM)], increase future DM risk. Promoting healthy GWG through behavioral interventions may prevent these pregnancy complications, but importantly has great potential for long-term, sustainable benefits to prevent postpartum weight retention (PPWR) and future obesity and DM, in women and the women's children. With the publication of the LIFE-Moms consortium's results, there is now strong evidence from efficacy trials showing that limiting GWG is achievable and associated with improved exercise and dietary behaviors. Several notable research gaps and next steps have emerged from the LIFE-Moms' studies, which the investigators address in this pragmatic trial. Because these studies were designed to test the efficacy of behavioral weight management on GWG, interventions were resource intensive (i.e. in-person counseling and with limited online and mobile technologies), without a focus on program implementation and sustainability in routine prenatal care settings and lacking intervention in the vulnerable postpartum period. To address these critical evidence gaps and reduce obesity associated with the pregnancy/postpartum periods, the next step is to integrate and test an evidence-based lifestyle intervention in pregnancy and postpartum that utilizes remote delivery of counseling, enables self-monitoring by patients using mobile and online technologies and supports obstetric providers and clinics to optimize care for women at high risk for obesity and future DM. The investigators' experienced team created and tested Healthy for Two / Healthy for You (H42/H4U). H42/H4U is an innovative evidence-based pregnancy/postpartum health coaching intervention that is remotely-delivered (phone coaching using motivational interviewing + web-based platform + mobile phone behavioral tracking). The aim of this R18 pragmatic randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to embed H42/H4U into prenatal care clinics that serve a racially and economically diverse population, leveraging existing staff as trained health coaches and community health workers (CHWs), to test its effectiveness and implementation. The investigators hypothesize that women in the H42/H4U arm will have lower GWG and lower rates of GDM, without an increase in low birth weight infants, and that implementation into the investigators' prenatal care clinics will be feasible and scalable. The investigators will rigorously test this hypothesis through the following Specific Aims: Aim 1. Test the effectiveness of H42/H4U integrated into prenatal care compared with Usual Care among 380 pregnant and postpartum women enrolled from 6 prenatal clinics on: A. Primary outcome: GWG (37 week minus baseline pregnancy [?15 week gestation] weight) B. Maternal secondary outcomes: Proportion with excessive GWG; GDM incidence; PPWR at 6 months after delivery C. Infant secondary outcomes: Weight at birth, 4 and 6 months. D. Other outcomes: Maternal health behaviors (diet, physical activity, breastfeeding); Maternal wellness (depression, sleep and stress) Aim 2. Assess organizational factors that impact the implementation of the intervention into prenatal care clinics, including costs of intervention delivery and provider and staff satisfaction to inform future dissemination. A. Provider and staff perspectives, including satisfaction, workflow barriers and potential for sustainability, using qualitative semi-structured interviews (n=15 at baseline and end of study). B. Cost analysis to assess intervention delivery costs and the return on investment (ROI) of H42/H4U. This study will advance a potentially powerful, prenatal care-based strategy to reduce obesity in young adult childbearing women and thereby the intergenerational effects on the women's children. The investigators' interdisciplinary team brings together engaged academic and community-based obstetricians, the investigators' health system's population health program and researchers with experience in developing, testing and implementing behavioral interventions in both pregnant and non-pregnant adults in real world settings to enable wide dissemination. Ultimately, the investigators' goal is to design and produce an effective and scalable behavioral strategy, integrated into clinical practice that will: 1) reduce excessive GWG and its associated pregnancy complications, 2) reduce future obesity, DM and other obesity-related complications in mothers and the mothers' children, and 3) ensure high quality care delivery that prevents obesity and DM through a population health approach to prenatal care.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04724330
Collaborators
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Wendy L Bennett, MD, MPH Johns Hopkins University