Deaf Weight Wise: A novel randomized clinical trial with Deaf sign language users

Author:

Barnett Steven1ORCID,Matthews Kelly1,DeWindt Lori1,Sutter Erika1,Samuel‐Hodge Carmen2,Yang Hongmei3,Pearson Thomas A.4,

Affiliation:

1. Rochester Prevention Research Center: National Center for Deaf Health Research (RPRC/NCDHR) University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry Rochester New York USA

2. Department of Nutrition University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Department of Biostatistics and Computational Biology University of Rochester School of Medicine & Dentistry Rochester New York USA

4. Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health and Health Professions & College of Medicine University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe goal of this study was to address the absence of evidence‐based weight‐control programs developed for use with Deaf people.MethodsCommunity‐based participatory research informed the design of the Deaf Weight Wise (DWW) trial and intervention. DWW focuses primarily on healthy lifestyle and weight through change in diet and exercise. The study enrolled 104 Deaf adults aged 40 to 70 years with BMI of 25 to 45 from community settings in Rochester, New York, and randomized participants to immediate intervention (n = 48) or 1‐year delayed intervention (n = 56). The delayed intervention serves as a no‐intervention comparison until the trial midpoint. The study collected data five times (every 6 months) from baseline to 24 months. All DWW intervention leaders and participants are Deaf people who use American Sign Language (ASL).ResultsAt 6 months, the difference in mean weight change for the immediate‐intervention arm versus the delayed‐intervention arm (no intervention yet) was −3.4 kg (multiplicity‐adjusted p = 0.0424; 95% CI: −6.1 to −0.8 kg). Most (61.6%) in the immediate arm lost ≥5% of baseline weight versus 18.1% in the no‐intervention‐yet arm (p < 0.001). Participant engagement indicators include mean attendance of 11/16 sessions (69%), and 92% completed 24‐month data collection.ConclusionDWW, a community‐engaged, culturally appropriate, and language‐accessible behavioral weight loss intervention, was successful with Deaf ASL users.

Funder

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference33 articles.

1. Clinical and cultural issues in caring for deaf people;Barnett S;Fam Med,1999

2. Health care system accessibility

3. Deaf sign language users, health inequities, and public health: opportunity for social justice;Barnett S;Prev Chronic Dis,2011

4. Community Participatory Research With Deaf Sign Language Users to Identify Health Inequities

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