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Healthy Youth Places: A Program to Promote Nutrition and Physical Activity in Adolescents
This study is ongoing, but not recruiting participants.
Study NCT00059527   Information provided by Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
First Received: April 28, 2003   Last Updated: August 9, 2005   History of Changes

April 28, 2003
August 9, 2005
March 1999
 
  • Moderate and Vigorous Physical Activity
  • Vigorous Physical Activity
  • Fruit and Vegetable Consumption
Same as current
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00059527 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
Self-efficacy
Same as current
 
Healthy Youth Places: A Program to Promote Nutrition and Physical Activity in Adolescents
Youth Environments Promoting Nutrition and Activity

To reduce the risk for chronic disease, adolescents should eat at least five servings of fruit and vegetables and be physically active daily. This study will implement and evaluate a school-based program to encourage adolescents to achieve and maintain a healthy diet and exercise regimen.

The Healthy Youth Places project will test if an intervention strategy that implements school environmental change, with both adult leader and youth participation, will influence and maintain adolescent fruit and vegetable consumption and physical activity.

The study will assess the effects of school environment and curriculum interventions promoting fruit and vegetable (F&V) consumption, physical activity (PA), and their environmental determinants. The project will involve goal-setting and efficacy-building interventions designed to develop the skills and group efficacy of both adult school personnel and students. The adult-based interventions are designed to change the school environments through a school coalition assisted by a local coordinator. The youth interventions involve the participation of students in the processes of building the local health behavior environments and target both school lunch and after-school activity environments.

The project encourages adult and youth participation in the process of planning and implementing environmental change in targeted adolescent physical and social environments (school lunch place, after-school program place). Environmental change is defined as implemented practices, programs, and policies that promote critical elements (connection, autonomy, skill-building, healthy fruit and vegetable and physical activity norms). These critical elements are social environmental processes of behavior change.

Sixteen schools will be randomly assigned to either the experimental or the control (no treatment) condition. The health behavior of adolescents will be assessed during the sixth, seventh, eighth, and ninth grades. Measurement of F&V and PA behaviors are the primary outcomes and will be assessed by self-report and verified by objective measures of school lunch purchases and physical activity monitoring. The impact of the program on personal, environmental, and behavioral determinants of F&V and PA will also be measured.

Phase IV
Interventional
Educational/Counseling/Training, Randomized, Open Label, Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Health Behavior
Behavioral: Healthy Youth Places: a behavior change model
 
Dzewaltowski DA, Estabrooks PA, Johnston JA. Healthy youth places promoting nutrition and physical activity. Health Educ Res. 2002 Oct;17(5):541-51.

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Active, not recruiting
2000
May 2003
 

Inclusion Criteria

  • Student attending sixth through eighth grades
  • Participating middle school
Both
11 Years to 16 Years
Yes
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
 
 
NCT00059527
 
5R01HD37367-3
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
 
Principal Investigator: David A Dzewaltowski, Ph.D. Community Health Institute, Kansas State University
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
August 2005

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP