Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Health

Sponsor
University of Washington (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT05818384
Collaborator
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) (NIH)
176
2
2
48.7
88
1.8

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Investigators will conduct a two-group randomized waitlist-control trial to assess the efficacy of the Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Health program on improving physical activity, reducing sedentary behaviors and improving healthful eating habits as well as delaying or reducing alcohol, tobacco and other drug use. Wakaya is an experiential, outdoor, nature-based program grounded in Choctaw values. It is a multi-level intervention that increases individual motivation and leadership skills to make healthy behavioral choices for behavior and exercise.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Curriculum
N/A

Detailed Description

Study participants will be recruited in staggered cohorts with those in each recruitment wave receiving individual-level random assignment to either immediate intervention or waitlist control (3 months wait to intervention) for a total of 176 Choctaw youth (ages 14-19 years) participating over 5 years.

Recruitment strategies:

The following Recruitment strategies will be used: posting flyers, posters and brochures in stores, community centers, and other locations identified by our community advisors; and posting flyers in the tribal newspaper, school newsletters, tribal gathering areas, tribal health fairs, pow wows, local boys and girls clubs, youth centers, other local news outlets, and on a study webpage.

Screening:
  • Participants will mainly be screened in-person, some may be screened over phone using the same talking points.

  • Youth who are screened out will be given a community resource list.

  • If a person is eligible, but declines to participate, they will be given a brief one-item exit question regarding general reason for non-participation.

  • Eligible youth who agree to participate will be asked to schedule their baseline assessment.

After consent or assent and parental permission are obtained, CNO study staff will set up the study laptop and headphones that the participant will use to enter their responses to the baseline computer-assisted questionnaire.

Assessments:

The baseline assessment consists of a brief physical health assessment and a computer-assisted behavioral health survey administered by study staff. Youth participants are required to take a non-invasive physical health assessment (BMI with portable digital weight scale and height measure), identify the age they began puberty (girls < 12 years old began menstruation; boys <14 when voice changed "a lot" will be classified as early puberty) and to use an accelerometer for 7 days after the baseline assessment. They will also be asked to run or walk for 12 minutes. The computer-assisted behavioral health survey will ask a series of questions and take under 45 minutes to complete.

The assessments will be conducted via Audio-Computer Assisted Self-Interviews (ACASI) programmed into study computers. Participants will complete 4 surveys: baseline, immediately after Trail of Tears Walk, a three-month follow up,and a six-month follow-up.

Intervention Schedule:

Month 1-3: Up to 20 group sessions on Choctaw history, traditions, cultural systems and health beliefs. Experiential, outdoor activities are incorporated to promote group cohesion, improve relational worldviews, and connectedness to nature and the environment. Examples include activities on an outdoor ropes course or increasing physical activity by walking or gardening. Fitbits will be given to participants and peers can choose to support each other to meet goals on a social media platform. Up to 3 individual Motivational Interviewing sessions to identify personal change goals and community leadership.

Month 2-3: Attend an Overnight Culture Camp to strengthen group cohesion and synthesize goals.

Month 3: Walk on the Choctaw Trail of Tears and visit ancient sites. Upon completion, make a commitment to conduct a community-wide event based on personal and leadership goals and Trail experience.

Months 4-12: Up to 6 group meetings to plan community leadership events related to obesity prevention, includes an individual MI booster session to revise their personal & community leadership goals, digital storytelling training, and a community Traditional Games Olympiad. Participants may create a story related to healthful food habits, obesity prevention and alcohol, tobacco and other drug use (ATOD).

Month 9: Share digital stories, community events, and participate in a leadership ceremony.

Post-intervention: Ripple Effect Mapping focus groups among 64 individuals. A random selection of 12 youth per region and 4 nonparticipant community stakeholders i.e., elders, leaders in the community.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
176 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Crossover Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Prevention
Official Title:
Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Health
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Apr 10, 2023
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Mar 30, 2027
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Apr 30, 2027

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Wait List Control

Participants in the Wait List group will be randomly assigned to start the intervention 3 months later in the Summer.

Behavioral: Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Curriculum
An experiential, outdoor, nature-based program grounded in Choctaw values. It is a multi-level intervention that increases individual motivation and leadership skills to make healthy behavioral choices for behavior and exercise.

Experimental: Wakaya (Immediate Group)

Participants in the immediate group will be randomly assigned to start the intervention immediately in the Spring.

Behavioral: Wakaya: Rising Up for Choctaw Youth Curriculum
An experiential, outdoor, nature-based program grounded in Choctaw values. It is a multi-level intervention that increases individual motivation and leadership skills to make healthy behavioral choices for behavior and exercise.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Change in physical activity assessed by self-report [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); and 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Assessed by the International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form (IPAQ) for youth and young adults. Results can be reported in categories (low, moderate or high activity levels) or as a continuous variable (MET minutes a week). MET minutes represent the amount of energy expended carrying out physical activity.

  2. Change in physical activity intensity associated with movement, measured by accelerometer [Baseline and 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    An actigraph accelerometer measures vertical acceleration in counts per minute. It will be worn for 7 days. Mean counts per minute are calculated by dividing the sum of activity counts for a valid day be the number of minutes of wear time in a day for all valid days. Greater number of counts per minute indicates higher physical activity intensity. Change in mean counts per minute from baseline at 9 months will be assessed.

  3. Change in sedentary behaviors over time [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Measured by the Youth Leisure-time Sedentary Behavior Questionnaire (YLSBQ) adapted for Choctaw Youth

  4. Change in food and beverage habits over time [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Assessed by the Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System (YRBS) 2023.

  5. Change in beverage habits over time [Baseline; post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Assessed by the Modified Healthy Home Survey (2005- Beverages). It assesses the number of sweetened drinks consumed per week.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Body Mass Index (BMI) change [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Mean or percentage change in BMI from baseline. Weight (kg) and height (meters) will be combined to report BMI as kg/m^2.

  2. Weight change assessed via digital scale [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Mean weight change (kg)

  3. Change in food addiction [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    The Yale Food Addiction Scale is a validated measure that has been developed to identify those who are most likely to be exhibiting markers of substance dependence with the consumption of high fat/high sugar foods. Food addiction (dichotomous) can be "diagnosed" when three symptoms and clinically significant impairment or distress are present. Continuous version of the scale ranges from 0 symptoms to 7 symptoms. Higher indicates more symptoms and worse dependence on high fat or high sugar foods.

  4. Change in tobacco use frequency (non-ceremonial use) assessed by self-report [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Tobacco use frequency will be assessed by 5 items on a 7-level ordinal scale from the YRBS 2023. With higher responses, reflecting greater tobacco use.

  5. Change in alcohol use over time [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Alcohol use (current use, binge drinking) assessed by the YRBS 2023.

  6. Change in marijuana use over time [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3); 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    Past 30 day marijuana use (smoking, vaping, edibles) assessed by the YRBS 2023.

  7. Change in drug and alcohol refusal self-efficacy [Baseline; Immediate post-intervention (month 3) 3 months post (month 6); 6 months post-intervention (month 9)]

    The Specific Event Drug and Alcohol Refusal Self-Efficacy (SEDARE) measure captures the perceived likelihood that youth will use drugs and alcohol in specific situations on a 3-point scale (Yes, No, Unsure). The SEDARE produces two scores ranging from 0 to 8. Higher scores reflect greater self-efficacy to refuse alcohol or drugs.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
14 Years to 19 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Be enrolled in Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma (CNO)

  • Be enrolled in High School

  • Live within CNO tribal region for 12 months

YES to one of the following:
  • Consumed sweetened beverages or processed/fast food 2x or more per week; OR

  • Engaged in excessive sitting or lying around (>540 min/day) or engage in small screen recreation (>2 hours/day); OR

  • Physical activity - spend <60 minutes/day outdoors or <2.5 hrs per week in moderate or vigorous physical activity OR spend <60 minutes a day in moderate or vigorous intensity aerobic activity; OR

  • Engage in any T.V., small screen/video game recreation (> 2 hours/day)

Exclusion Criteria:
  • opioid/methamphetamine drug use (2 times or more in past month)

  • allergic reactions to food (e.g. peanuts), plant (poison oak or ivy) or insects (e.g. bees, fire ants) that caused difficulty in breathing or necessitated hospitalization or caused an anaphylactic reaction

  • disability that prevents student from walking or from engaging in exercise

  • aggressive, violent, combative or inappropriate behaviors

  • inability to follow directions

  • psychotic symptoms

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma Talihina Oklahoma United States 74571
2 University of Washington, IWRI, School of Social Work Seattle Washington United States 98105

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of Washington
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Karina Walters, PhD, University of Washington
  • Principal Investigator: Michelle Johnson-Jennings, PhD, University of Washington

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Karina Walters, Professor, School of Social Work, University of Washington
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05818384
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • STUDY00015208
  • 1R01DA056416
First Posted:
Apr 18, 2023
Last Update Posted:
Apr 18, 2023
Last Verified:
Apr 1, 2023
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Karina Walters, Professor, School of Social Work, University of Washington
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Apr 18, 2023