Linking Exericise for Advancing Daily Stress (LEADS) Management and Resilience in African American Families

Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (2) locations...
Intervention Type: Behavioral, Other
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Chronic stressors have wide-reaching harmful effects on the physical, social, and psychological well-being of many African American (AA) families. These stressors place some AA adolescents, who already experience low rates of physical activity (PA) and high rates of obesity, at even greater risk for developing chronic diseases. Previous family-based interventions have targeted PA, diet, and sedentary behaviors to prevent and manage overweight and obesity, but few have been successful for AA adolescents. The investigators propose that this may be because chronic stressors are a major challenge to engagement in health promotion efforts, which has been significantly overlooked in previous interventions for AA families. Resilience-based interventions that empower youth to cope with daily stressors have shown improvements across a broad range of outcomes including mental health, academic achievement, and risk-taking behaviors. However, no previous study has evaluated a family-based stress and coping plus positive parenting intervention on improving engagement in PA in AA families. The Linking Exercise for Advancing Daily Stress (LEADS) Management intervention integrates a family-based intervention to address chronic stressors to promote behavioral skills for increasing PA in overweight AA adolescents and their parents. Based on Lazarus and Folkman's Stress and Coping Model, Family Systems, and Social Cognitive Theories, the proposed intervention integrates components that build coping skills (mindfulness, deep breathing, active coping, cognitive reframing), self-esteem (self-affirmation), and positive parenting practices (parent support, nurturance, family routines). The investigators propose that these protective factors as integrated into the LEADS intervention will buffer the negative effects of chronic stressors, which will lead to greater improvements in PA. The investigators pilot research indicates that the LEADS family-based intervention was feasible and acceptable and led to increased moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) for adolescents. Thus, the primary aim of this study is 1) to evaluate the efficacy of the LEADS intervention on increasing MVPA from baseline to post-intervention, and maintenance at a 6-month follow-up in overweight AA adolescents. Secondary aims will examine 2) the effect of the LEADS intervention on light PA, dietary intake, family mealtime, body mass index, waist circumference, and blood pressure outcomes, 3) the effects of the intervention on parent outcomes, as well as examining 4) mediators of the intervention effect on changes in PA.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 11
Maximum Age: 16
Healthy Volunteers: t
View:

• adolescent BMI greater than or equal 70th percentile;

• self-identified African American or Black adolescents 11-16 years;

• at least one parent/caregiver participating;

• not currently in a structured physical activity, weight loss program or stress management program

• access to the internet in his/her home.

Locations
United States
South Carolina
University of South Carolina
RECRUITING
Columbia
M.H. Newton Family Life Enrichment Center
RECRUITING
Sumter
Contact Information
Primary
Dawn K. Wilson, Ph.D.
wilsondk@mailbox.sc.edu
803-777-4137
Time Frame
Start Date: 2025-01-25
Estimated Completion Date: 2029-08-10
Participants
Target number of participants: 330
Treatments
Active_comparator: Comprehensive Health Education
Includes a series of health education sessions, including hypertension, diabetes, cancer, sleep, social media advocacy, metabolism, financial literacy.
Experimental: Intervention Arm
Behavioral Intervention for reducing stress and increasing resilience for improve physical activity, healthy diet, and wellbeing
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)
Leads: University of South Carolina

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov