Pilot and Feasibility Studies (Dec 2019)

Feasibility, user experiences, and preliminary effect of Conversation Cards for Adolescents© on collaborative goal-setting and behavior change: protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial

  • M. Kebbe,
  • A. Farmer,
  • M. P. Dyson,
  • S. D. Scott,
  • T. L. F. McHugh,
  • S. Lappa,
  • H. Rajani,
  • T. Ladha,
  • B. Islam,
  • L. Jacoby,
  • F. Nasir,
  • K. Talwar,
  • J. L. Wincott,
  • M. Zhang,
  • G. D. C. Ball

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40814-019-0533-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background Adolescents and providers can benefit from practical tools targeting lifestyle modification for obesity prevention and management. We created Conversation Cards for Adolescents© (CCAs), a patient-centered communication and behavior change tool for adolescents and providers to use in clinical practice. The purpose of our study is to (i) assess the feasibility of CCAs in a real-world, practice setting to inform full-scale trial procedures, (ii) assess user experiences of CCAs, and (iii) determine the preliminary effect of CCAs on changing behavioral and affective-cognitive outcomes among adolescents. Methods Starting in early 2019, this prospective study is a nested mixed-methods, theory-driven, and pragmatic pilot randomized controlled trial with a goal to enroll 50 adolescents (13–17 years old) and 9 physicians practicing at the Northeast Community Health Centre in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Adolescents will collaboratively set one S.M.A.R.T. (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, timely) goal with their physician to implement over a 3-week period; however, only those randomized to the experimental group will use CCAs to inform their goal. Outcome assessments at baseline and follow-up (3 weeks post-baseline) will include behavioral, affective-cognitive, and process-related outcomes. Discussion In examining the feasibility, user experiences, and preliminary effect of CCAs, our study will add contributions to the obesity literature on lifestyle modifications among adolescents in a real-world, practice setting as well as inform the scalability of our approach for a full-scale effectiveness randomized controlled trial on behavior change. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03821896.

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