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An overview of the Together Everyone Achieves More Physical Activity (TEAM-PA) trial to increase physical activity among African American women.

Authors :
Sweeney, Allison M.
Wilson, Dawn K.
Zarrett, Nicole
Martin, Pamela
Hardin, James W.
Fairchild, Amanda
Mitchell, Sheryl
Decker, Lindsay
Source :
Contemporary Clinical Trials. Jun2023, Vol. 129, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Together Everyone Achieves More Physical Activity (TEAM-PA) trial is a randomized controlled trial testing the efficacy of a group-based intervention for increasing physical activity (PA) among insufficiently active African American women. The TEAM-PA trial uses a group cohort design, is implemented at community sites, and will involve 360 African American women. The trial compares a 10-week group-based intervention vs. a standard group-delivered PA comparison program. Measures include minutes of total PA/day using 7-day accelerometer estimates (primary outcome), and body mass index, blood pressure, waist circumference, walking speed, sedentary behavior, light physical activity, and the percentage achieving ≥150 min of moderate to vigorous PA/week (secondary outcomes) at baseline, post-intervention, and 6-months post-intervention. The intervention integrates elements from Social Cognitive Theory, Self-Determination Theory, Group Dynamics Theory, and a focus on collectivism to evaluate different components of social affiliation (relatedness, reciprocal support, group cohesion, and collective efficacy). The intervention integrates shared goal-setting via Fitbits, group-based problem-solving, peer-to-peer positive communication, friendly competition, and cultural topics related to collectivism. Compared to the standard group-delivered PA program, participants in the intervention are expected to show greater improvements from baseline to post- and 6-month follow-up on minutes of total PA/day and secondary outcomes. Social affiliation variables (vs. individual-level factors) will be evaluated as mediators of the treatment effect. The results of the TEAM-PA trial will determine the efficacy of the intervention and identify which aspects of social affiliation are most strongly related to increased PA among African American women. This study was registered on Clinicaltrials.gov (# NCT05519696) in August 2022 prior to initial participant enrollment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15517144
Volume :
129
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Contemporary Clinical Trials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163931398
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cct.2023.107207