An Application of SMART Methodology to Optimize an Intervention to Maintain Improvements in Health Behaviors in Under-resourced Patients After Phase II Cardiac Rehabilitation
The Miriam Hospital
Summary
The study is sponsored by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, which is part of the National Institutes of Health. The study expects to enroll 400 subjects. The research team will recruit research participants that are finishing or will finish cardiac rehabilitation soon. Participants belong to one or more groups of people who are less often studied in cardiac rehabilitation research, may have less access to a formal cardiac rehabilitation maintenance program, or they may especially benefit from additional support after cardiac rehabilitation ends. The main purposes of this study are to evaluate which treatments work the best after cardiac rehabilitation, which order to deliver the treatments in, and which treatments are as minimally burdensome as possible while still working well. This study will make two comparisons (one comparison between a set of low-intensity interventions and another between a set of higher-intensity interventions) to determine which produces the best behavioral adherence immediately after Phase II (outpatient) cardiac rehabilitation
Description
The research team will first test which of two automated online interventions (\[A\] a low-intensity text-messaging intervention of 3 weekly sets of text messages focused on encouragement and reminders about the key health behaviors for 2 months, or \[B\] a fully automated 2-month online program modeled on our previous research, consisting of interactive lessons, self-monitoring, and tailored feedback) serves as the best first-line intervention. The second test is which of two home-based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) maintenance interventions produces the best outcomes for non-responders to the…