Treatment Trials

3 Clinical Trials for Various Conditions

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NOT_YET_RECRUITING
Inspire HER: Inspiring the Heart and Emotions for Radical Health
Description

Poor heart health puts Black women at risk for a shorter life with more illness than people of any other non-indigenous racial group. We will refine and conduct a randomized, wait-list controlled trial of Inspire HER (a heart health lifestyle intervention for Black women that provides health education, physical activity, and social resources). We will also compare Inspire HER and Black Impact (a heart health intervention for Black men) data to study how women and men respond differently to stress. This trial aligns with American Heart Association's pledge to address heart health equity through new interventions that consider the person and the circumstances with which they live.

RECRUITING
SUSTAIN: Behavior Change and Nutrition Security for CKMS
Description

To determine the feasibility and engagement of participants in the SUSTAIN intervention compared to enhanced usual care over 24 weeks through mixed-methods measurement of participant enrollment, adherence, retention, and engagement (counseling, screenings, referrals, and uptake). Methods: Leveraging rigorous quantitative and qualitative evaluation, the study team will identify mechanisms driving intervention feasibility and engagement. Hypothesis: SUSTAIN will be feasible with a high degree of engagement among Medicaid-enrolled participants with Stage 2 CKMS in comparison to enhanced usual care.

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Food is Medicine vs Lifestyle Medicine For Cardiovascular Kidney Metabolic (CKM) Syndrome
Description

The investigators are piloting a 3 month community-based lifestyle medicine program that incorporates experiences and education in urban agriculture, nutrition, culinary arts, and physical fitness to test the hypothesis whether this improves clinical and socio-behavioral outcomes of participants with Cardiovascular Kidney Metabolic (CKM) syndrome (high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, heart disease, and obesity) in comparison to the current medical care model (usual care) or providing healthy produce (medically tailored groceries).