Evaluation of the Effectiveness and Implementation of the BETTER Women Peer Health Coaching Program

Sponsor
Women's College Hospital (Other)
Overall Status
Recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT04746859
Collaborator
Canadian Cancer Society (CCS) (Other), Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) (Other), Women's College Hospital Foundation (Other), Women's College Hospital Family Practice Health Centre (Other), Barrie and Community Family Health Team (Other), University Health Network, Toronto (Other), Applied Health Research Centre (Other), Summerville Family Health Team (Other)
408
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33.6
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Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

The Building on Existing Tools To improvE cancer and chronic disease pRevention and screening in primary care (BETTER) Program allows patients in primary care to have a dedicated visit with a prevention practitioner to discuss chronic disease prevention and cancer screening. A prevention practitioner is a health professional, working in primary care, who has received additional training to discuss chronic disease prevention and screening and develop health goals with patients through shared decision-making. Previous studies have shown that this approach increases the number of prevention and screening actions completed by program participants. However, maintenance of health behaviour changes is difficult without on-going support. There is also some evidence that peer-delivered coaching can improve health outcomes in community settings. As such, the BETTER Women program extends the BETTER program by focusing on 40 to 68-year-old women and providing time-limited support for health behaviour change through peer health coaches. Coaches are volunteers - trained in techniques to support health behaviour change - who support women to achieve their health goals over a 6-month period. In this study, the investigators will explore: (i) whether patients who participate in health coaching after a prevention visit are more likely to increase the number of prevention and screening actions that they complete after six months, compared to women who participate in a prevention visit but do not get health coaching; (ii) whether the intervention effects endure six months after the intervention ends; and (iii) the implementation of the program to learn about factors that affect various aspects of the success and sustainability of the program.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Prevention Visit
  • Behavioral: Peer health coaching
N/A

Detailed Description

While the BETTER program has been shown to successfully increase the number of preventive care and screening actions completed by patient participants after six months, it is known that it is difficult to maintain new health behaviours in the long-term. Unfortunately, it is not feasible to fund health professionals to offer repeated follow-up visits over the time needed to turn initial behaviour changes into long-term habits. Therefore, the investigators are building upon the existing BETTER program by adding a peer health coaching extension that will provide time-limited coaching for patients who want support as they work towards achieving preventive health goals. This approach takes advantage of growing awareness of the role of lay health coaches in improving and extending the quality and value of primary care.

This is a three-site, pragmatic, wait-list-controlled, randomized, Type 1 hybrid effectiveness-implementation trial with blinded outcome collection after 6 months. One site will be an urban, academic, hospital-based clinic; the second will be a clinic serving a greater proportion of patients from rural areas; and the third site will be a suburban clinic with a large South Asian population. Investigators will invite women who are 40-68 years old to have a single visit with a prevention practitioner and receive behaviour change support for up to six months from a health coach. Coaches will do a 24-hr training course, which includes special techniques to support health behaviour change, before they are matched to a patient. At the suburban site, only South Asian peer health coaches will be recruited and this work is being guided by a South Asian Community Advisory Council made up of members of various community organizations in that region. Patients who enroll in BETTER Women will be randomized to receive health coaching either immediately (intervention group) or after a 6-month delay (wait-list control group).

Effectiveness of the program will be assessed by evaluating for each patient, how many of a set of target chronic disease prevention and screening actions were completed at six months, in comparison to baseline. Investigators will also assess whether patients achieved the health goals that they set with their prevention practitioners, physiological markers of health, as well as habits and behaviours related to diet, physical activity, smoking and alcohol use. These outcomes will be collected via electronic surveys administered at baseline, 3- and 6-months* post enrollment as well as through extraction of data from the patients' electronic medical records and BETTER program documents. These outcomes will be compared between the two groups of patients in the study. Additionally, investigators will survey intervention group participants and extract relevant data from their electronic medical records at 12-months* post enrollment.

An embedded process evaluation will be conducted during the trial to examine the implementation of the program. The process evaluation will include collection of program data, electronic surveys administered to patients as well as qualitative interviews with intervention group patients, peer health coaches and prevention practitioners. Investigators will examine how acceptable the program was to patients; whether and why any adaptations were made; how well the program was utilized; how well the coaches delivered the intervention (e.g., what behaviour change techniques were used); how engaged patients and coaches were with the program; and mechanism(s) of action. Ultimately, investigators expect to gain an understanding of the program's sustainability, acceptability, cost-effectiveness, and factors that might impact future attempts at spread and scale.

Investigators expect to see that women in the intervention group (i.e., those who had a health coach) will complete more preventive and screening actions after six months. Investigators also expect to see that women in the intervention group will make more progress on achieving health goals and making lifestyle changes which reduce the risk of chronic diseases and cancers, that the intervention will increase women's access to resources in their primary care clinics and community, as well as improve the women's ability to maintain healthy behaviours.

Note*: The investigators initially planned to collect surveys and data for the primary outcome (for both groups) at 12 months post enrollment. However, due to pandemic-related recruitment challenges, the data collection timeline was amended as described above to allow more time for recruitment within the project timeline.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
408 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Health Services Research
Official Title:
BETTER Women: Community-Based, Primary Care-Linked Peer Health Coaching to Achieve Evidence-Based Preventive Care Goals - A Pragmatic, Wait-List Controlled Effectiveness-Implementation Trial
Actual Study Start Date :
Jun 14, 2021
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Apr 1, 2024
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Apr 1, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Intervention

Patients will have a prevention visit with a Prevention Practitioner (a healthcare provider who has received additional training), complete the baseline survey then be invited to receive ongoing support from a trained, volunteer peer health coach, for up to six months. The coach will support the patient as she works towards achieving personalized health goals to reduce her risk of chronic diseases, including cancer. Patients will be administered additional surveys at 3 and 6 months and a final survey at 12 months.

Other: Prevention Visit
Patients will have a one-on-one, approximately one-hour long visit with a specially trained Prevention Practitioner. During this visit, they will discuss the patient's health history, their risks for developing chronic diseases, including cancer, and possible steps they can take to reduce those risks. The Prevention Practitioner will also assist the patient to develop and articulate specific goals the patient would like to work on to reduce their risk of chronic diseases.

Behavioral: Peer health coaching
Patients will be invited to register with the software platform used to facilitate peer health coaching. Once they have registered, they will be matched to a peer health coach who will connect with the patient to initiate the process. The coach will work collaboratively with the patient to help her follow through on a step-wise, personalized plan to achieve health goals that were developed with their prevention practitioner. The coach's approach will be informed by principles of brief action planning and motivational interviewing. Coaches will also provide social support, help to navigate to relevant information and community resources, and advise about options for self-monitoring. Coaching will occur over 12-16 sessions via phone calls, text messages, video calls and/or in-person meetings as desired/convenient and in accordance with local public health guidelines.

Other: Wait-list Control

Patients will have a prevention visit with a Prevention Practitioner (a healthcare provider who has received additional training) and complete a baseline survey, after which they will receive usual care from their healthcare providers. Patients will be administered another survey at 3 months and a final survey at 6 months. After study completion (about 6-months after the initial prevention visit), patients will be invited to receive ongoing support from a trained, volunteer peer health coach, for up to six months. The coach will support the patient as she works towards achieving personalized health goals to reduce her risk of chronic diseases, including cancer.

Other: Prevention Visit
Patients will have a one-on-one, approximately one-hour long visit with a specially trained Prevention Practitioner. During this visit, they will discuss the patient's health history, their risks for developing chronic diseases, including cancer, and possible steps they can take to reduce those risks. The Prevention Practitioner will also assist the patient to develop and articulate specific goals the patient would like to work on to reduce their risk of chronic diseases.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Increased targeted behaviours from baseline [0, 6 months]

    The primary outcome is binary and defined as whether a patient increased the number of completed targeted behaviours from baseline to end of follow-up at 6 months. The targeted behaviours include the status (up to date or out of date) of three cancer screening tests (cervical, breast, colorectal) and the status (meeting evidence-based target or not) of four behavioural determinants for risk of cancer and chronic disease (diet, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity). If a patient meets at least one more target at 6 months than they met at baseline, their outcome will be considered positive.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Goal achievement [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Percentage of patient-set health goals that was achieved

  2. Breast cancer screening status [0, 6 months]

    Binary assessment of whether the patient is up to date on their breast cancer screening, as per their history and level of risk

  3. Cervical cancer screening status [0, 6 months]

    Binary assessment of whether the patient is up to date on their cervical cancer screening, as per their history and level of risk

  4. Colorectal cancer screening status [0, 6 months]

    Binary assessment of whether the patient is up to date on their colorectal cancer screening, as per their history and level of risk

  5. Diet status [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the patient's Mediterranean Diet Score is at target (≥9)

  6. Improvement in diet [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether there was an evidence-based improvement (change ≥2) in diet between assessment points

  7. Diet management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient took at least one meaningful action towards diet management

  8. Physical activity status [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether time (in minutes) spent doing moderate to vigorous physical activity in the last seven days is at the evidence-based target (≥150minutes)

  9. Improvement in physical activity [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether or not there was improvement in the physical activity index (PAI) between assessment points

  10. Physical activity management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient took at least one meaningful action towards physical activity management

  11. Smoking status [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether smoking status meets the target of abstinent for the last 30 days

  12. Improvement in smoking [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the patient's cigarette consumption category, based on consumption of cigarettes per day (cpd), has improved (i.e., cpd decreased) between assessment points

  13. Smoking management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient took at least one meaningful action towards management of smoking behaviour

  14. Alcohol use status [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether alcohol use is at evidence-based target, i.e., number of drinks per day is <1 and never having ≥1 drink on one occasion

  15. Improvement in alcohol use [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether AUDIT risk category has improved (i.e., risk level has decreased) between assessment points

  16. Alcohol use management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient took at least one meaningful action towards management of alcohol use

  17. Up-to-date measurement of glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the latest HbA1c measurement is up to date at study end, as per patient's characteristics

  18. HbA1c control [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the latest measurement, at study end, is up to date and at target (<7%)

  19. HbA1c [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    The most recent and up to date HbA1c measurement for patients with diabetes mellitus (DM)

  20. Glycemic management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient with DM (HbA1c not at target) has taken any meaningful actions towards management of blood sugar through initiation of new antihyperglycemic medication, up-titration of existing antihyperglycemic medications, or discussion with healthcare professional regarding behavioural changes needed to improve blood sugar

  21. Up-to-date measurement of blood pressure (BP) [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the latest BP measurement is up to date, as per patient's characteristics

  22. BP control [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the most recent measurement is up to date and at target as per patient's characteristics

  23. Systolic BP [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    The most recent and up to date systolic BP measurement

  24. Diastolic BP [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    The most recent and up to date diastolic BP measurement

  25. Hypertension management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient with BP not at target has taken at least one action towards management of hypertension through initiation of new blood pressure medication, up-titration of existing blood pressure medication, or discussion with healthcare professional regarding behavioural changes needed to improve blood pressure

  26. Up-to-date assessment of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the latest LDL measurement is up to date, as per patient's characteristics

  27. LDL control [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether the most recent LDL measurement is up to date and at target as per patient's characteristics

  28. LDL [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    The most recent and up to date LDL measurement

  29. LDL cholesterol management [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient with LDL not at target has taken at least one action towards management of LDL through initiation of new LDL medication, up-titration of existing LDL medication, or discussion with healthcare professional regarding behavioural changes needed to improve cholesterol

  30. Up-to-date assessment for obesity [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether body mass index (BMI) calculation or waist circumference (WC) measurement is up to date, as per patient's characteristics

  31. BMI control [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether latest, up to date BMI is within target (≤ 30kg/m2)

  32. Management of obesity [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Binary assessment of whether patient with BMI not at target took any meaningful actions towards management of obesity through use of medication or discussion with healthcare professional regarding behavioural changes needed to manage obesity

Other Outcome Measures

  1. Cardiovascular risk [0, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    10-year cardiovascular risk

  2. Health-related quality of life [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    Health utility score based on European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions-5 Levels (EQ-5D-5L) health state

  3. Quality-adjusted life year (QALY) [0, 3, 6 months; 12 months for intervention group only]

    An estimation of the combined health utility values derived from responses from EQ-5D-5L and length of life experienced by patient, between measurement time points

  4. Outpatient visits [6 months]

    Number of times patient accessed publicly funded outpatient healthcare services (e.g., visit to primary care physician, outpatient hospital-based services) while enrolled in the study

  5. Emergency room (ER) visits [6 months]

    Number of times patient accessed publicly funded healthcare services from a hospital emergency room while enrolled in the study

  6. Total healthcare costs [6 months]

    The total cost of publicly funded healthcare utilization (outside of delivery of the intervention) by patient while enrolled in the study

  7. Intervention cost/patient [4 years]

    Incremental cost of the intervention (i.e., delivery of peer health coaching only) per patient

  8. Duration of intervention effect [6, 12 months]

    This outcome is ordinal and calculated *only for intervention group patients*. It represents the nature of the change in the number of completed targeted behaviours from end of intervention (at 6 months) to end of follow-up (at 12 months). The targeted behaviours include the status (meeting evidence-based target or not) of four behavioural determinants for risk of cancer and chronic disease (diet, smoking, alcohol use, physical activity). If a patient meets more targets at 12 months compared to 6 months, the patient will be said to have improved. If the same number of targets are met, the patient will be said to be unchanged. If fewer targets are met, the patient will be said to have worsened.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
40 Years to 68 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Patient identifies as a woman;

  • Patient is 40-68yo;

  • Patient has an email address;

  • Patient has at least one behavioural risk factor not at target or at least one cancer screening overdue as defined below:

  • Score of less than 9 on the Mediterranean Diet Tool

  • Less than 150 minutes of moderate to vigorous physical activity per week

  • Smoked a cigarette within the last 30 days

  • Average number of drinks per day is ≥1 and/or has >1 drink on any single occasion

  • Due or overdue for one or more of breast, cervical or colorectal cancer screenings;

  • Patient has a valid number for the provincial health insurance program (Ontario Health Insurance Program [OHIP]); and

  • Patient's medical records for, at least the previous 3 years are accessible through their family physician.

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Patient is unable to give informed consent in English due to language, literacy, or competence;

  • Patient is unable or unwilling to communicate with the study team to collect outcomes in English via both email and phone; or

  • Patient's primary care provider has identified medical comorbidities or other conditions at baseline that might interfere with the patient's ability to follow through on the intervention.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Barrie and Community Family Health Team Barrie Ontario Canada L4N 7L3
2 Summerville Family Health Team Mississauga Ontario Canada L5B 2P7
3 Women's College Hospital Family Practice Health Centre Toronto Ontario Canada M5S 1B3

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Women's College Hospital
  • Canadian Cancer Society (CCS)
  • Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC)
  • Women's College Hospital Foundation
  • Women's College Hospital Family Practice Health Centre
  • Barrie and Community Family Health Team
  • University Health Network, Toronto
  • Applied Health Research Centre
  • Summerville Family Health Team

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Noah M Ivers, MD, PhD, Women's College Hospital
  • Principal Investigator: Aisha Lofters, MD, PhD, Women's College Hospital

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Additional Information:

Publications

Responsible Party:
Noah Ivers, Clinician-Scientist, Women's College Hospital
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT04746859
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 2020-0079-E
First Posted:
Feb 10, 2021
Last Update Posted:
Jul 11, 2022
Last Verified:
Jul 1, 2022
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Noah Ivers, Clinician-Scientist, Women's College Hospital
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jul 11, 2022