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Effectiveness of a walking group intervention to promote physical activity and cardiovascular health in predominantly non-Hispanic black and Hispanic urban neighborhoods: findings from the walk your heart to health intervention.

Health education & behavior : the official publication of the Society for Public Health Education
June 1, 2015
Amy J Schulz et al. (15 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a community-based walking intervention (WYHH) in promoting physical activity and reducing cardiovascular risk among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents in Detroit.

Results Summary

The intervention group significantly increased step counts during the initial 8-week period, with associated reductions in systolic blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, total cholesterol, waist circumference, and body mass index, which were maintained at 32 weeks.

Population

Non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan, in a low-to-moderate income urban community.

Effective Dosage

Walking groups met three times per week for 45 to 90 minutes (duration increased over time).

Duration

32 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
increase
steps
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
β = 2004.5, p = .000
increased steps significantly more
#1
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
decrease
systolic blood pressure
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
-
reductions in systolic blood pressure
#2
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
decrease
fasting blood glucose
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
-
reductions in fasting blood glucose
#3
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
decrease
total cholesterol
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
-
reductions in total cholesterol
#4
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
decrease
waist circumference
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
-
reductions in waist circumference
#5
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention
decrease
body mass index
non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan
-
reductions in body mass index
#6
Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) community health promoter-facilitated walking group intervention
decrease
multiple indicators of cardiovascular risk
predominantly Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black participants in a low-to-moderate income urban community
-
significant reductions in multiple indicators of cardiovascular risk
#7
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the Walk Your Heart to Health (WYHH) intervention, one component of the multilevel Community Approaches to Cardiovascular Health: Pathways to Heart Health (CATCH:PATH) intervention designed to promote physical activity and reduce cardiovascular risk among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic residents of Detroit, Michigan. The study was designed and implemented using a community-based participatory research approach that actively engaged community residents, health service providers and academic researchers. It was implemented between 2009 and 2012. METHOD: WYHH was a 32-week community health promoter-facilitated walking group intervention. Groups met three times per week at community-based or faith-based organizations, and walked for 45 to 90 minutes (increasing over time). The study used a cluster randomized control design to evaluate effectiveness of WYHH, with participants randomized into intervention or lagged intervention (control) groups. Psychosocial, clinical, and anthropometric data were collected at baseline, 8, and 32 weeks, and pedometer step data tracked using uploadable peisoelectric pedometers. RESULTS: Participants in the intervention group increased steps significantly more during the initial 8-week intervention period, compared with the control group (β = 2004.5, p = .000). Increases in physical activity were associated with reductions in systolic blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, total cholesterol, waist circumference and body mass index at 8 weeks, and maintained at 32 weeks. CONCLUSION: The WYHH community health promoter-facilitated walking group intervention was associated with significant reductions in multiple indicators of cardiovascular risk among predominantly Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black participants in a low-to-moderate income urban community. Such interventions can contribute to reductions in racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic inequities in cardiovascular mortality.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultBlack or African AmericanAge FactorsBlood GlucoseBlood PressureBody Mass IndexBody Weights and MeasuresCardiovascular DiseasesCommunity-Based Participatory ResearchFemaleHealth PromotionHispanic or LatinoHumansLipidsMaleMichiganMiddle AgedPovertyResidence CharacteristicsRisk FactorsSex FactorsSocial SupportUrban PopulationWalking
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations52
Citations/Year5.2
Relative Citation Ratio2.44
NIH Percentile80.1%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.86
Normalized Score0.70
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