BACKGROUND: Ethnic minorities and lower-income adults have among the highest rates of obesity and lowest levels of regular physical activity (PA). The Positive Action for Today's Health (PATH) trial compares three communities that are randomly assigned to different levels of an environmental intervention to improve safety and access for walking in low income communities. DESIGN AND SETTING: Three communities matched on census tract information (crime, PA, ethnic minorities, and income) were randomized to receive either: an intervention that combines a police-patrolled-walking program with social marketing strategies to promote PA, a police-patrolled-walking only intervention, or no-walking intervention (general health education only). Measures include PA (7-day accelerometer estimates), body composition, blood pressure, psychosocial measures, and perceptions of safety and access for PA at baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. INTERVENTION: The police-patrolled walking plus social marketing intervention targets increasing safety (training community leaders as walking captains, hiring off-duty police officers to patrol the walking trail, and containing stray dogs), increasing access for PA (marking a walking route), and utilizes a social marketing campaign that targets psychosocial and environmental mediators for increasing PA. MAIN HYPOTHESES/OUTCOMES: It is hypothesized that the police-patrolled walking plus social marketing intervention will result in greater increases in moderate-to-vigorous PA as compared to the police-patrolled-walking only or the general health intervention after 12 months and that this effect will be maintained at 18 and 24 months. CONCLUSIONS: Implications of this community-based trial are discussed.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Ethnic minorities and lower-income adults have among the highest rates of obesity and lowest levels of regular physical activity (PA). The Positive Action for Today's Health (PATH) trial compares three communities that are randomly assigned to different levels of an environmental intervention to improve safety and access for walking in low income communities. DESIGN AND SETTING: Three communities matched on census tract information (crime, PA, ethnic minorities, and income) were randomized to receive either: an intervention that combines a police-patrolled-walking program with social marketing strategies to promote PA, a police-patrolled-walking only intervention, or no-walking intervention (general health education only). Measures include PA (7-day accelerometer estimates), body composition, blood pressure, psychosocial measures, and perceptions of safety and access for PA at baseline, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. INTERVENTION: The police-patrolled walking plus social marketing intervention targets increasing safety (training community leaders as walking captains, hiring off-duty police officers to patrol the walking trail, and containing stray dogs), increasing access for PA (marking a walking route), and utilizes a social marketing campaign that targets psychosocial and environmental mediators for increasing PA. MAIN HYPOTHESES/OUTCOMES: It is hypothesized that the police-patrolled walking plus social marketing intervention will result in greater increases in moderate-to-vigorous PA as compared to the police-patrolled-walking only or the general health intervention after 12 months and that this effect will be maintained at 18 and 24 months. CONCLUSIONS: Implications of this community-based trial are discussed.
Authors: Carlos F Mendes de Leon; Kathleen A Cagney; Julia L Bienias; Lisa L Barnes; Kimberly A Skarupski; Paul A Scherr; Denis A Evans Journal: J Aging Health Date: 2009-02
Authors: Shannon N Zenk; Joellen Wilbur; Edward Wang; Judith McDevitt; April Oh; Richard Block; Sue McNeil; Nina Savar Journal: Health Educ Behav Date: 2008-07-31
Authors: Jordan A Carlson; Nicole L Bracy; James F Sallis; Rachel A Millstein; Brian E Saelens; Jacqueline Kerr; Terry L Conway; Lawrence D Frank; Kelli L Cain; Abby C King Journal: Med Sci Sports Exerc Date: 2014-08 Impact factor: 5.411
Authors: Jason Katz; Abraham Wandersman; Robert M Goodman; Sarah Griffin; Dawn K Wilson; Michael Schillaci Journal: Eval Program Plann Date: 2013-03-28
Authors: Dawn K Wilson; Caitlyn Ellerbe; Andrew B Lawson; Kassandra A Alia; Duncan C Meyers; Sandra M Coulon; Hannah G Lawman Journal: Spat Spatiotemporal Epidemiol Date: 2012-11-17
Authors: Sandra M Coulon; Dawn K Wilson; Sarah Griffin; Sara M St George; Kassandra A Alia; Nevelyn N Trumpeter; Abraham K Wandersman; Melinda Forthofer; Shamika Robinson; Barney Gadson Journal: Am J Public Health Date: 2012-10-18 Impact factor: 9.308
Authors: Andrew B Lawson; Caitlyn Ellerbe; Rachel Carroll; Kassandra Alia; Sandra Coulon; Dawn K Wilson; M Lee VanHorn; Sara M St George Journal: Stat Methods Med Res Date: 2014-04-16 Impact factor: 3.021