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A Community-based Program That Supports Physical Activity, Healthy Eating, Social Participation and System Navigation in Older Adults

A Community-based Program That Supports Physical Activity, Healthy Eating, Social Participation and System Navigation in Older Adults

Recruiting
55 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Physical mobility and social participation are needed to maintain independence and quality of life for adults over 55 years of age. Despite the known benefits of physical activity and dietary change programs for older adults, the best ways to deliver these interventions are not well understood. The goal of the EMBOLDEN study is to promote physical and community mobility in older adults who experience difficulties taking up community programs and reside in areas of high health inequity. Building on existing best practices, the investigators will implement and evaluate an innovative co-designed community-based program to promote physical activity, healthy eating, social participation, and system navigation. The potential for spreading this program throughout Hamilton and adapted to other Canadian communities will also be explored

Description

This is a randomized controlled trial employing a type II hybrid implementation-effectiveness design. This will enable the investigators to evaluate both clinical outcomes and important processes that impact the implementation of the co-designed intervention.

The intervention will consist of i) weekly interactive group-based health education sessions focused on: increasing knowledge, skills, and behaviours related to physical activity, healthy eating, and available community supports for older adults; this will include facilitated physical activity delivered by a certified exercise physiologist or certified personal trainer with experience and expertise working with older adults and interactive nutrition sessions; socialization to foster peer and community connections, co-learning, and decrease social isolation; and skill-building to support independence and quality of life; and ii) tailored system navigation support to increase access to and use of health and social services systems and address barriers or unmet needs

This trial has a pragmatic design in the following ways: i) recruiting a population with broad inclusion criteria, reflective of the general population of older adults; ii) conducting the study in existing community settings (when in-person delivery is feasible) and virtually, in partnership with organizations already delivering virtual supports due to the pandemic; iii) leveraging existing resources, staff, and service delivery organizations in the intervention arm that are available in usual care; iv) supporting flexibility delivery of the intervention (e.g., tailoring to participant group needs), as would be done through other community programs in usual care; v) flexibility in adherence to the intervention, in ways that are consistent with usual care; vi) selecting primary and secondary outcomes that are participant-relevant; and vii) using intention to treat analyses based on all available data.

The study will be delivered in community settings in urban neighbourhoods identified as areas of health inequities in the cities of Hamilton and Toronto, Ontario.

Eligibility

Inclusion criteria:

        • Community-dwelling older adults (55 years of age and older) living in a neighbourhood
        selected for the study.
        Exclusion criteria:
          -  Unable to speak or understand English
          -  Unable to walk 10 meters without physical assistance from another person (assistive
             devices permitted)
        As a pragmatic trial, we have chosen broad inclusion criteria to reflect the
        characteristics of individuals who may join a program such as this outside of a research
        study. Thus, we will not exclude individuals based on the presence of existing chronic
        disease, comorbidities, or other factors that may impact attendance.

Study details
    Mobility Limitation
    Health Related Quality of Life
    Healthy Aging
    Health Inequity

NCT05008159

McMaster University

16 May 2024

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