12 results on '"Hollis, Jenna"'
Search Results
2. Two-year follow-up of a randomised controlled trial to assess the sustainability of a school intervention to improve the implementation of a school-based nutrition policy
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Wolfenden, Luke, Nathan, Nicole, Reilly, Kathryn, Delaney, Tessa, Janssen, Lisa M, Reynolds, Renee, Sutherland, Rachel, Hollis, Jenna, Lecathelinais, Christophe, Williams, Christopher M, Wyse, Rebecca, Wiggers, John, and Yoong, Serene
- Published
- 2019
3. Antenatal care addressing gestational weight gain (GWG): a cross sectional study of pregnant women's reported receipt and acceptability of recommended GWG care and associated characteristics.
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Hollis, Jenna L, Deroover, Kristine, Licata, Milly, Tully, Belinda, Farragher, Eva, Lecathelinais, Christophe, Bennett, Nicole, Foster, Michelle, Pennell, Craig E, Wiggers, John, Daly, Justine, and Kingsland, Melanie
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PRENATAL care , *WEIGHT gain , *INDIGENOUS Australians , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *PREGNANT women , *WOMEN'S hospitals - Abstract
Background: The Australian Clinical Practice Guidelines for Pregnancy Care recommend that during the first and subsequent antenatal visits all pregnant women are weighed; advised of recommended gestational weight gain (GWG), dietary intake and physical activity; and offered referrals for additional support if needed. The extent to which these recommendations are implemented and women's acceptability of recommended care is unknown. This study examines women's reported receipt and acceptability of guideline care for GWG, and characteristics associated with receipt of such care and its acceptability. Methods: From September 2018 to February 2019 a telephone survey was undertaken with women who had recently had a baby and received antenatal care from five public maternity services within a health district in Australia. Women self-reported their demographic characteristics, and receipt and acceptability of recommended GWG care. Receipt and acceptability of such care, and their association with the characteristics of women and the maternity service they attended, were examined using descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression analyses. Results: Of 514 women, 13.1% (95%CI:10.3–16.5) reported that they received an assessment of weight at both their first and a subsequent antenatal visit, and less than one third (30.0%; 95%CI:26.0-33.9) received advice on their recommended GWG range, dietary intake and physical activity. Just 6.6% (95%CI:4.8–9.1) of women reported receiving all assessment and advice components of recommended antenatal care, and 9.9% (95%CI:7.6–12.8) of women reported being referred for extra support. Women who were younger (OR = 1.13;95%CI:1.05–1.21), identifying as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (OR = 24.54;95%CI:4.98-120.94), had a higher pre-pregnancy BMI (OR = 1.13;95%CI:1.05–1.21), were experiencing their first pregnancy (OR = 3.36;95%CI:1.27–8.86), and lived in a least disadvantaged area (compared to mid-disadvantaged area (OR = 18.5;95%CI:2.6-130.5) and most disadvantaged area (OR = 13.1;95%CI:2.09–82.4)) were more likely to receive recommended assessment and advice. Most Aboriginal (92%) and non-Aboriginal (93%) women agreed that recommended GWG care is acceptable. Conclusion: Most women perceive antenatal care for GWG as recommended by the Clinical Practice Guidelines as acceptable, but did not receive it. When provided, such care is not delivered consistently to all women regardless of their characteristics or those of the maternity service they attend. There is a need for service-wide practice change to increase routine GWG care in pregnancy for all women. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. Breastfeeding practices and associations with pregnancy, maternal and infant characteristics in Australia: a cross-sectional study.
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Reynolds, Renee, Kingsland, Melanie, Daly, Justine, Licata, Milly, Tully, Belinda, Doherty, Emma, Farragher, Eva, Desmet, Clare, Lecathelinais, Christophe, McKie, Julianne, Williams, Melanie, Wiggers, John, and Hollis, Jenna
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OBESITY ,LACTATION ,ATTITUDES toward breastfeeding ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,TIME ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,CROSS-sectional method ,SELF-evaluation ,AGE distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies ,BREASTFEEDING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,INTENTION ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,BODY mass index ,SMOKING ,ODDS ratio ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Background: Exclusive breastfeeding to six months of age is a major global public health priority. Several characteristics are known to be associated with early cessation of breastfeeding, however, limited evidence exists regarding whether women's reported reasons for cessation are associated with maternal, pregnancy and infant characteristics. The aims of this study were to: i) describe women's reported intention to breastfeed and their subsequent breastfeeding practices; ii) describe women's reported reasons for breastfeeding cessation prior to the infant being five months of age; and iii) examine associations between these factors and maternal, pregnancy and infant characteristics. Methods: Telephone and online surveys were conducted between October 2019 and April 2020 with 536 women who had given birth in the previous eight to 21 weeks at four public maternity services in Australia. Results: The majority of women intended to (94%), and did, initiate (95%) breastfeeding. At the time the survey was conducted, 57% of women were exclusively breastfeeding. Women who: had less than University level education, had a pre-pregnancy BMI in the overweight or obese category, and who smoked tobacco at the time of the survey had lower odds of exclusively breastfeeding. The most common self-reported reasons for breastfeeding cessation were breastfeeding challenges (47%) and low milk supply (40%). Women aged 26–35 years and 36 + years had greater odds of reporting breastfeeding cessation due to low milk supply (OR = 2.92, 95% CI: 1.11, 7.66; OR = 5.57, 95% CI: 1.70, 18.29) compared to women aged 18–25 years. While women who had completed a TAFE certificate or diploma had lower odds of reporting this as a reason for breastfeeding cessation (OR = 0.28; 95% CI: 0.11, 0.73) compared to women who had University level education. There were no other significant associations found between characteristics and reasons for ceasing breastfeeding. Conclusions: The most common reasons for breastfeeding cessation may be modifiable through the provision of breastfeeding support in the early postpartum period, with such support being tailored to women's age and level of education. Such support should aim to increase women's self-efficacy in breastfeeding, and be provided from the antenatal period and throughout the first six months postpartum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Effectiveness of an intervention to facilitate the implementation of healthy eating and physical activity policies and practices in childcare services: a randomised controlled trial.
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Jones, Jannah, Wyse, Rebecca, Finch, Meghan, Lecathelinais, Christophe, Wiggers, John, Marshall, Josephine, Falkiner, Maryann, Pond, Nicole, Sze Lin Yoong, Hollis, Jenna, Fielding, Alison, Dodds, Pennie, Clinton-McHarg, Tara, Freund, Megan, McElduff, Patrick, Gillham, Karen, Wolfenden, Luke, and Yoong, Sze Lin
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CHILD care services ,PHYSICAL activity ,FOOD consumption ,MEDICAL practice ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,FOLLOW-up studies (Medicine) ,CHILD care ,COMMUNICATION ,COMPARATIVE studies ,DIET ,EMPLOYEE orientation ,EXERCISE ,HEALTH promotion ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,HEALTH policy ,RESEARCH ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research ,BLIND experiment ,EVALUATION of human services programs - Abstract
Background: The primary aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention to increase the implementation of healthy eating and physical activity policies and practices by centre-based childcare services. The study also sought to determine if the intervention was effective in improving child dietary intake and increasing child physical activity levels while attending childcare.Methods: A parallel group, randomised controlled trial was conducted in a sample of 128 childcare services. Intervention strategies included provision of implementation support staff, securing executive support, staff training, consensus processes, academic detailing visits, tools and resources, performance monitoring and feedback and a communications strategy. The primary outcome of the trial was the proportion of services implementing all seven healthy eating and physical activity policies and practices targeted by the intervention. Outcome data were collected via telephone surveys with nominated supervisors and room leaders at baseline and immediately post-intervention. Secondary trial outcomes included the differences between groups in the number of serves consumed by children for each food group within the Australian Guide to Healthy Eating and in the proportion of children engaged in sedentary, walking or very active physical activity assessed via observation in a random subsample of 36 services at follow-up.Results: There was no significant difference between groups for the primary trial outcome (p = 0.44). Relative to the control group, a significantly larger proportion of intervention group services reported having a written nutrition and physical activity policy (p = 0.05) and providing adult-guided activities to develop fundamental movement skills (p = 0.01). There were no significant differences between groups at follow-up on measures of child dietary intake or physical activity.Conclusions: The findings of the trial were equivocal. While there was no significant difference between groups for the primary trial outcome, the intervention did significantly increase the proportion of intervention group services implementing two of the seven healthy eating and physical activity policies and practices. High levels of implementation of a number of policies and practices at baseline, significant obesity prevention activity in the study region and higher than previously reported intra-class correlation of child behaviours may, in part, explain the trial findings.Trial Registration: Australian Clinical Trials Registry (reference ACTRN12612000927820 ). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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6. Does Motivational Interviewing Align with International Scope of Practice, Professional Competency Standards, and Best Practice Guidelines in Dietetics Practice?
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Hollis, Jenna L., Williams, Lauren T., Collins, Clare E., and Morgan, Philip J.
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REGULATION of body weight , *DIET , *DIETETICS , *HEALTH behavior , *MEDICAL practice , *NUTRITION counseling , *JOB performance , *MOTIVATIONAL interviewing ,DIETETICS research - Published
- 2014
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7. Antenatal care practices for gestational weight gain: a cross sectional survey of antenatal care providers reported provision and barriers to providing recommended care.
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Hollis JL, Deroover K, Daly J, Tully B, Foster M, Lecathelinais C, Pennell CE, Wiggers J, and Kingsland M
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Pregnancy, Adult, Australia, Attitude of Health Personnel, Surveys and Questionnaires, Male, Prenatal Care statistics & numerical data, Gestational Weight Gain
- Abstract
Background: Implementation of recommended gestational weight gain (GWG) care by antenatal care providers is poor. It is unclear whether practice implementation and barriers differ between antenatal care provider profession or experience. This study aimed to assesses the provision of and barriers to guideline care for GWG and examine associations with professional discipline and years of experience., Methods: A cross sectional survey was conducted with antenatal care providers working in three public maternity services in a regional city in Australia. Data were collected on the provision of and barriers (informed by the Theoretical Domains Framework) to recommended GWG care. Data were summarised using descriptive statistics. Associations between health profession characteristics (professional discipline and years providing antenatal care) and GWG care practices and barrier outcomes were assessed using multivariate logistic regression., Results: 117 antenatal care providers completed the survey (75% participation rate). One quarter (25%) reported that they routinely provided recommended GWG assessment at the first antenatal visit, and 9% at subsequent visits. Only 7% routinely provided recommended advice on GWG, healthy eating and physical activity. Professional discipline or years of experience were not associated with higher odds of GWG practices. Skills, belief about capabilities, belief about consequences and environmental context and resources were barriers to providing care. Medical professionals had higher odds of agreeing that they have been adequately trained to address GWG (OR = 9.14, 95%CI:3.10-26.90) and feel competent in having sensitive conversations with pregnant women about GWG (OR = 8.60, 95%CI:2.29-32.28) than midwives. Midwives had higher odds of agreeing that there are services they can refer pregnant women to for further support (OR = 2.80, 95%CI:1.13-6.91)., Conclusions: The provision of antenatal care for GWG was low, inconsistently provided and did not differ by professional discipline or years of experience. Antenatal care providers report numerous barriers including skills, belief about capabilities, belief about consequences, and environmental context and resources. Barriers to GWG care provision differed by professional discipline, but not years of providing care. The findings demonstrate that the type and prioritisation of practice-change implementation strategies may need to be tailored to address the differential barriers faced by professional groups., (© 2024. Crown.)
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- 2024
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8. Effect of implementation strategies on the routine provision of antenatal care addressing smoking in pregnancy: study protocol for a non-randomised stepped-wedge cluster controlled trial.
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Daly JB, Doherty E, Tully B, Wiggers J, Hollis J, Licata M, Foster M, Tzelepis F, Lecathelinais C, and Kingsland M
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Australia, Prenatal Care methods, Smoking therapy, Tobacco Use Cessation Devices, Controlled Clinical Trials as Topic, Smoking Cessation methods
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Introduction: Globally, guideline-recommended antenatal care for smoking cessation is not routinely delivered by antenatal care providers. Implementation strategies have been shown to improve the delivery of clinical practices across a variety of clinical services but there is an absence of evidence in applying such strategies to support improvements to antenatal care for smoking cessation in pregnancy. This study aims to determine the effectiveness and cost effectiveness of implementation strategies in increasing the routine provision of recommended antenatal care for smoking cessation in public maternity services., Methods and Analysis: A non-randomised stepped-wedge cluster-controlled trial will be conducted in maternity services across three health sectors in New South Wales, Australia. Implementation strategies including guidelines and procedures, reminders and prompts, leadership support, champions, training and monitoring and feedback will be delivered sequentially to each sector over 4 months. Primary outcome measures will be the proportion of: (1) pregnant women who report receiving a carbon monoxide breath test; (2) smokers or recent quitters who report receiving quit/relapse advice; and (3) smokers who report offer of help to quit smoking (Quitline referral or nicotine replacement therapy). Outcomes will be measured via cross-sectional telephone surveys with a random sample of women who attend antenatal appointments each week. Economic analyses will be undertaken to assess the cost effectiveness of the implementation intervention. Process measures including acceptability, adoption, fidelity and reach will be reported., Ethics and Dissemination: Ethics approval was obtained through the Hunter New England Human Research Ethics Committee (16/11/16/4.07; 16/10/19/5.15) and the Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council (1236/16). Trial findings will be disseminated to health policy-makers and health services to inform best practice processes for effective guideline implementation. Findings will also be disseminated at scientific conferences and in peer-reviewed journals., Trial Registration Number: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry-ACTRN12622001010785., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2024
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9. Modeling the Predictive Value of Evidence-Based Referral Criteria to Support Healthy Gestational Weight Gain among an Australian Pregnancy Cohort.
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Fealy S, Hollis J, Martin J, Leigh L, Oldmeadow C, Collins CE, Smith R, Wilkinson S, and Hure A
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- Australia, Body Mass Index, Cohort Studies, Female, Gestational Age, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Nutrition Therapy, Nutritionists, Pregnancy, Prenatal Care, Prenatal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Reference Values, Evidence-Based Medicine, Gestational Weight Gain, Referral and Consultation
- Abstract
Globally, there has been a renewed focus on addressing gestational weight gain (GWG). In Australia, the Department of Health pregnancy care guidelines recommend women be offered routine weighing and receive brief nutritional and physical activity support during antenatal care visits. Women gaining weight outside the Institute of Medicine (IOM)'s weight gain reference values are further recommended to be referred to a dietitian. However, professional and organizational barriers, including an absence of weight gain referral pathways and limited workforce resources, exist with the translation and scaling of these recommendations into practice. This study aimed to explore patterns of GWG among a cohort of Australian pregnant women and to determine if pregnancy weight gains of above or below 2 kg or 5 kg in the second and third trimester can be used to predict total GWG outside recommendations. Sensitivity, specificity, negative, and positive likelihood ratios were calculated. The most predictive time point was 24 weeks' gestation using the minimum weight change parameter of +/-2 kg, demonstrating reasonable sensitivity (0.81, 95% CI 0.61-0.83) and specificity (0.72, 95% CI 0.61-0.83), resulting in 55% ( n = 72/131) of the cohort qualifying for dietetic referral. Given the current health service constraints, a review of dietetic services within maternity care is warranted.
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- 2022
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10. Scale-up of the Physical Activity 4 Everyone (PA4E1) intervention in secondary schools: 12-month implementation outcomes from a cluster randomized controlled trial.
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Sutherland R, Campbell E, McLaughlin M, Nathan N, Wolfenden L, Lubans DR, Morgan PJ, Gillham K, Oldmeadow C, Searles A, Reeves P, Williams M, Kajons N, Bailey A, Boyer J, Lecathelinais C, Davies L, McKenzie T, Hollis J, and Wiggers J
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- Adolescent, Adult, Australia epidemiology, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Schools, Teacher Training, Exercise, Health Promotion, Physical Education and Training, Program Evaluation statistics & numerical data
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Background: 'Physical Activity 4 Everyone' (PA4E1) was an efficacious multi-component school-based physical activity (PA) program targeting adolescents. PA4E1 has seven PA practices. It is essential to scale-up, evaluate effectiveness and assess implementation of such programs. Therefore, the aim is to assess the impact of implementation support on school practice uptake of the PA4E1 program at 12 and 24 months., Methods: A cluster randomised controlled trial, utilising a type III hybrid implementation-effectiveness design, was conducted in 49 randomly selected disadvantaged Australian Government and Catholic secondary schools. A blinded statistician randomly allocated schools to a usual practice control (n = 25) or the PA4E1 program group (n = 24), with the latter receiving seven implementation support strategies to support school PA practice uptake of the seven practices retained from the efficacy trial. The primary outcome was the proportion of schools adopting at least four of the seven practices, assessed via telephone surveys with Head Physical Education Teachers and analysed using exact logistic regression modelling. This paper reports the 12-month outcomes., Results: Schools were recruited from May to November 2017. At baseline, no schools implemented four of the seven practices. At 12 months significantly more schools in the program group had implemented four of the seven practices (16/24, 66.7%) than the control group (1/25, 4%) (OR = 33.0[4.15-1556.4], p < 0.001). The program group implemented on average 3.2 (2.5-3.9) more practices than the control group (p < 0.001, mean 3.9 (SD 1.5) vs 0.7 (1.0)). Fidelity and reach of the implementation support intervention were high (both > 80%)., Conclusions: Through the application of multiple implementation support strategies, secondary schools were able to overcome commonly known barriers to implement evidence based school PA practices. As such practices have been shown to result in an increase in adolescent PA and improvements in weight status, policy makers and practitioners responsible for advocating PA in schools should consider this implementation approach more broadly when working with schools. Follow-up is required to determine whether practice implementation is sustained., Trial Registration: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12617000681358 registered 12th May 2017.
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- 2020
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11. Workday Sitting Time and Marital Status: Novel Pretreatment Predictors of Weight Loss in Overweight and Obese Men.
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Morgan PJ, Hollis JL, Young MD, Collins CE, and Teixeira PJ
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- Adult, Australia, Educational Status, Humans, Linear Models, Male, Middle Aged, New South Wales, Obesity diagnosis, Overweight diagnosis, Overweight therapy, Predictive Value of Tests, Program Evaluation, Risk Assessment, Single-Blind Method, Time Factors, Weight Loss, Work, Body Mass Index, Marital Status, Obesity therapy, Sitting Position, Weight Reduction Programs organization & administration
- Abstract
The evidence base for weight loss programs in men is limited. Gaining a greater understanding of which personal characteristics and pretreatment behaviors predict weight loss and attrition in male-only studies would be useful to inform the development of future interventions for men. In December 2010, 159 overweight/obese men (mean age = 47.5 years; body mass index = 32.7 kg/m
2 ) from the Hunter Region of New South Wales, Australia, participated in a randomized controlled trial testing the effectiveness of two versions of a 3-month gender-targeted weight loss program. In the current analyses, social-cognitive, behavioral, and demographic pretreatment characteristics were examined to determine if they predicted weight loss and attrition in the participants over 6 months. Generalized linear mixed models (intention-to-treat) revealed weight change was associated with education level ( p = .02), marital status ( p = .03), fat mass ( p = .045), sitting time on nonwork ( p = .046), and workdays ( p = .03). Workday sitting time and marital status accounted for 6.5% ( p = .01) of the variance in the final model. Attrition was associated with level of education ( p = .01) and body fat percentage ( p = .01), accounting for 9.5% ( p = .002) of the variance in the final model. This study suggests men who spend a lot of time sitting at work, especially those who are not married, may require additional support to experience success in self-administered weight loss programs targeting males. Additional high-quality evidence is needed to improve the understanding which pretreatment behaviors and characteristics predict weight loss and attrition in men.- Published
- 2018
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12. The 40-Something randomized controlled trial to prevent weight gain in mid-age women.
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Williams LT, Hollis JL, Collins CE, and Morgan PJ
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- Adult, Australia, Body Composition, Body Mass Index, Counseling, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Premenopause, Reference Values, Research Design, Women's Health, Motivational Interviewing, Obesity prevention & control, Weight Gain
- Abstract
Background: Obesity prevention is a major public health priority. Despite the health risks associated with weight gain, there has been a distinct lack of research into effective interventions to prevent, rather than treat, obesity particularly at high risk life stages such as menopause in women. This paper describes the rationale for and design of a 2-year randomized controlled trial (RCT) (the 40-Something Study) aimed at testing the feasibility and efficacy of a relatively low intensity intervention designed to achieve weight control in non-obese women about to enter the menopause transition., Methods and Design: The study is a parallel-group RCT consisting of 12 months of intervention (Phase 1) and 12 months of monitoring (Phase 2). Non-obese pre-menopausal healthy females 44-50 years of age were screened, stratified according to Body Mass Index (BMI) category (18.5-24.9 and 25-29.9 kg/m²) and randomly assigned to one of two groups: motivational interviewing (MI) intervention (n = 28), or a self-directed intervention (SDI) (control) (n = 26). The MI intervention consisted of five consultations with health professionals (four with a Dietitian and one with an Exercise Physiologist) who applied components of MI counselling to consultations with the women over a 12 month period. The SDI was developed as a control and these participants received print materials only. Outcome measures were collected at baseline, three, 12, 18 and 24 months and included weight (primary outcome), waist circumference, body composition, blood pressure, plasma markers of metabolic syndrome risk, dietary intake, physical activity and quality of life. Analysis of covariance will be used to investigate outcomes according to intervention type and duration (comparing baseline, 12 and 24 months)., Discussion: The 40-Something study is the first RCT aimed at preventing menopausal weight gain in Australian women. Importantly, this paper describes the methods used to evaluate whether a relatively low intensity, health professional led intervention will achieve better weight control in pre-menopausal women than a self-directed intervention. The results will add to the scant body of literature on obesity prevention methods at an under-researched high-risk life stage, and inform the development of population-based interventions., Trial Registration: ACTRN12611000064909.
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- 2013
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