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Abstract
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Toobert, D.J., Strycker, L.A., Glasgow, R.E., Barrera,
M., & Bagdade, J.D. (2002) Enhancing Support for Health Behavior
Change Among Women at Risk for Heart Disease: The Mediterranean Lifestyle
Trial. Health Education Research; 17:574-585.
This paper describes a randomized study to evaluate the
effects of a comprehensive lifestyle management intervention for 279
postmenopausal women with type 2 diabetes who are at elevated risk for
coronary heart disease (CHD). The intervention, called the Mediterranean
Lifestyle Trial (MLT), is focused on dietary factors, physical activity,
social support, and stress management. The MLT relies on a synthesis
of social-cognitive and social-ecologic theory, as well as goal-systems
theory, to explicitly inform the lifestyle intervention and to address
maintenance. Thus, the trial should help illuminate the theoretical mechanisms
responsible for lifestyle change. Primary outcome variables are dietary,
stress management, and physical activity behavior change; quality of
life; and CHD-related biological risk factors. Hypothesized mediating
variables include self-efficacy, coping, and social and environmental
support. Following the initial 6-month intervention, participants in
the intervention condition are randomized to one of two groups designed
to enhance maintenance of effects: either a peer-led support group or
a personalized multilevel community resources maintenance condition.
Unlike the peer group, the personalized approach focuses on multiple
levels of community resources to promote healthful lifestyle change.
Because this research focuses on issues of generalization and translation
to practice, the RE-AIM evaluation framework is being used to evaluate
Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance. This
framework will help to translate research into practice by directing
researchers' attention to important but seldom-investigated strategies
for enhancing longer-term maintenance. Specifically, the study tests
how long-term maintenance may be improved through the use of existing
community resources, an intervention based on multiple environmental
factors and multiple lifestyle behaviors, and lay leaders vs. personalized
professional support. |