Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial

BackgroundMaternal obesity is associated with significant racial disparities. People who identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx are at the highest risk related adverse short- and long-term health outcomes (eg, hypertension in pregnancy and postpartum weight retention). Rem...

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Main Authors: Lindsay M Martin, Christine D McKinney, Lia Escobar Acosta, Janelle W Coughlin, Noelene K Jeffers, Alexandra Solano-Umaña, Kathryn A Carson, Nae-Yuh Wang, Wendy L Bennett, Kelly M Bower
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2025-01-01
Series:JMIR Research Protocols
Online Access:https://www.researchprotocols.org/2025/1/e62847
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author Lindsay M Martin
Christine D McKinney
Lia Escobar Acosta
Janelle W Coughlin
Noelene K Jeffers
Alexandra Solano-Umaña
Kathryn A Carson
Nae-Yuh Wang
Wendy L Bennett
Kelly M Bower
author_facet Lindsay M Martin
Christine D McKinney
Lia Escobar Acosta
Janelle W Coughlin
Noelene K Jeffers
Alexandra Solano-Umaña
Kathryn A Carson
Nae-Yuh Wang
Wendy L Bennett
Kelly M Bower
author_sort Lindsay M Martin
collection DOAJ
description BackgroundMaternal obesity is associated with significant racial disparities. People who identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx are at the highest risk related adverse short- and long-term health outcomes (eg, hypertension in pregnancy and postpartum weight retention). Remote lifestyle interventions delivered during and after pregnancy hold promise for supporting healthy weight outcomes; however, few are tested in groups of people who self-identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx or address the neighborhood-level and psychosocial factors driving maternal health disparities. Implementing remote lifestyle interventions within community-based programs that serve birthing people may optimize trust and engagement, promote scalability and sustainability, and have the broadest public health impact. ObjectiveThe goal of this trial is to test the effectiveness of a culturally adapted remote lifestyle intervention (Healthy for Two–Home Visiting) implemented within home visiting compared to usual home visiting services on postpartum weight retention among pregnant or postpartum individuals, in particular those who identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx. Facilitators and barriers to implementation of the intervention within home visiting will be examined. MethodsWe describe the rationale and protocol for this hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial. In this paper, we highlight the community-engaged approach and trial design features that enable the implementation of the intervention within home visiting and demonstrate its applicability to the target population. Participants will be 360 pregnant individuals with overweight or obesity enrolled between 20 and 33 weeks of gestation and randomized 1:1 to Healthy for Two–Home Visiting or usual home visiting services. The primary outcome is weight retention at 6 months post partum, calculated as 6-month postpartum weight minus earliest pregnancy weight (≤18 wk of gestation). The measures of implementation include intervention feasibility, acceptability, reach, adoption, and fidelity. Throughout the paper, we highlight the community input used to improve intervention effectiveness and study implementation and as a strategy to promote maternal health equity. ResultsThis study was funded in June 2021, and recruitment began in April 2023. As of November 2024, we enrolled 90 participants. Data collection to assess the intervention’s effectiveness is expected to end in June 2026. Implementation evaluation is expected to conclude in December 2026. ConclusionsThis hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial integrates a culturally adapted remote lifestyle intervention into early home visiting services to examine its effectiveness on postpartum weight retention compared to usual home visiting. We anticipate that the study results will enable an understanding of the drivers of successful implementation within a community-based setting to maximize the future sustainability and dissemination of a strategy for reducing long-term obesity and other maternal health disparities. Trial RegistrationClinicaltrials.gov NCT05619705; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05619705 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/62847
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-690888e3411b446ab2bb7878fe87f00c2025-01-07T22:30:46ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR Research Protocols1929-07482025-01-0114e6284710.2196/62847Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled TrialLindsay M Martinhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5822-6542Christine D McKinneyhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6667-7864Lia Escobar Acostahttps://orcid.org/0009-0003-5048-180XJanelle W Coughlinhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7924-5892Noelene K Jeffershttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-0957-6690Alexandra Solano-Umañahttps://orcid.org/0009-0003-6834-351XKathryn A Carsonhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1548-6918Nae-Yuh Wanghttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-6513-9730Wendy L Bennetthttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-9828-0706Kelly M Bowerhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-5445-0061 BackgroundMaternal obesity is associated with significant racial disparities. People who identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx are at the highest risk related adverse short- and long-term health outcomes (eg, hypertension in pregnancy and postpartum weight retention). Remote lifestyle interventions delivered during and after pregnancy hold promise for supporting healthy weight outcomes; however, few are tested in groups of people who self-identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx or address the neighborhood-level and psychosocial factors driving maternal health disparities. Implementing remote lifestyle interventions within community-based programs that serve birthing people may optimize trust and engagement, promote scalability and sustainability, and have the broadest public health impact. ObjectiveThe goal of this trial is to test the effectiveness of a culturally adapted remote lifestyle intervention (Healthy for Two–Home Visiting) implemented within home visiting compared to usual home visiting services on postpartum weight retention among pregnant or postpartum individuals, in particular those who identify as non-Hispanic Black and Latinx. Facilitators and barriers to implementation of the intervention within home visiting will be examined. MethodsWe describe the rationale and protocol for this hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial. In this paper, we highlight the community-engaged approach and trial design features that enable the implementation of the intervention within home visiting and demonstrate its applicability to the target population. Participants will be 360 pregnant individuals with overweight or obesity enrolled between 20 and 33 weeks of gestation and randomized 1:1 to Healthy for Two–Home Visiting or usual home visiting services. The primary outcome is weight retention at 6 months post partum, calculated as 6-month postpartum weight minus earliest pregnancy weight (≤18 wk of gestation). The measures of implementation include intervention feasibility, acceptability, reach, adoption, and fidelity. Throughout the paper, we highlight the community input used to improve intervention effectiveness and study implementation and as a strategy to promote maternal health equity. ResultsThis study was funded in June 2021, and recruitment began in April 2023. As of November 2024, we enrolled 90 participants. Data collection to assess the intervention’s effectiveness is expected to end in June 2026. Implementation evaluation is expected to conclude in December 2026. ConclusionsThis hybrid type I effectiveness-implementation randomized controlled trial integrates a culturally adapted remote lifestyle intervention into early home visiting services to examine its effectiveness on postpartum weight retention compared to usual home visiting. We anticipate that the study results will enable an understanding of the drivers of successful implementation within a community-based setting to maximize the future sustainability and dissemination of a strategy for reducing long-term obesity and other maternal health disparities. Trial RegistrationClinicaltrials.gov NCT05619705; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05619705 International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)DERR1-10.2196/62847https://www.researchprotocols.org/2025/1/e62847
spellingShingle Lindsay M Martin
Christine D McKinney
Lia Escobar Acosta
Janelle W Coughlin
Noelene K Jeffers
Alexandra Solano-Umaña
Kathryn A Carson
Nae-Yuh Wang
Wendy L Bennett
Kelly M Bower
Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
JMIR Research Protocols
title Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
title_fullStr Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
title_full_unstemmed Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
title_short Remote Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Postpartum Weight Retention: Protocol for a Community-Engaged Hybrid Type I Effectiveness-Implementation Randomized Controlled Trial
title_sort remote lifestyle intervention to reduce postpartum weight retention protocol for a community engaged hybrid type i effectiveness implementation randomized controlled trial
url https://www.researchprotocols.org/2025/1/e62847
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