Background: Approximately 40% of Veterans have obesity. Intensive weight management programs such as MOVE! promote clinically significant weight loss, but only 3-7% of eligible Veterans attend. Low enrollment and high attrition are due to obstacles such as travel, cost, and motivation. Developed through over 20 years of research, Mental Contrasting with Implementation Intentions (MCII) is a novel, evidence-based intervention to increase motivation and behavior change. MCII has been shown to increase physical activity and consumption of fruits and vegetables and promote weight loss, and the research team recently demonstrated that MCII is feasible and acceptable to Veterans for weight management. However, has not been tested adequately within primary care nor demonstrated weight loss in Veterans. The investigators propose to evaluate the efficacy and implementation of MCII for behavior change and weight loss in Veterans within primary care when combined with the VA MOVE! Program.
Significance/Impact: This proposal aligns with the VA HSRD "primary care practice and management of complex chronic diseases" funding priority. Primary care providers and PACT members do not provide sufficient counseling to increase engagement with the MOVE! Program. MCII can be taught by lay educators and can be delivered in conjunction with MOVE! and other weight management treatments.
Innovation: MCII is innovative in its use of imagery, ease of delivery by lay educators, novel mechanisms of action (via non-conscious motivational and cognitive processes), and ability to be combined with other programs. Veterans can practice MCII on their own in under 10 minutes. MCII uses a standardized, 4-step imagery procedure called WOOP that can be taught in 30 minutes. Veterans can then continue to use WOOP regularly, with the assistance of a WOOP App and website containing video-, audio-, and paper-based tools. This study will be the first randomized controlled trial of MCII within primary care and the first RCT to test the efficacy and implementation of MCII for weight management when combined with MOVE! in Veterans.
Specific Aims: 1. Compare the impact of MCII + MOVE!/TeleMOVE! vs. MOVE!/TeleMOVE! alone on percent weight change and waist circumference at 6 and 12 months. 2. Compare the impact of MCII + MOVE!/TeleMOVE! vs. MOVE!/TeleMOVE! alone on MOVE!/TeleMOVE! program attendance, healthy eating, and physical activity at 6 and 12 months. 3. Evaluate implementation of MCII. The investigators will use the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework to evaluate implementation barriers, facilitators, and outcomes of MCII.
Methodology: The investigators will enroll 405 Veterans and randomize 366 Veterans at the patient level within primary care to either MCII + telephone-delivered MOVE!/TeleMOVE! (intervention) vs. telephone-delivered MOVE!/TeleMOVE! alone (control) at the Manhattan VA. At 6 and 12 months, participants will return to the clinic for a study visit where weight, diet, and physical activity will be assessed in both groups. The investigators will use intention-to-treat analyses.
Implementation/Next Steps: MCII is designed to be easily implemented in a variety of settings and for a variety of behaviors. Freely available online training materials will facilitate implementation. To guide future implementation and policy change, the research team will present data from Aim 3 implementation analyses and obtain input from Veteran stakeholders as well as local VA and NCP leaders. If found to be efficacious, the investigators will conduct hybrid effectiveness/implementation studies of MCII in a multi-site study.