Evaluating the efficacy of the Thai Health Improvement Profile intervention for preventing weight gain in people with early stage psychosis: A randomized controlled trial.

Int J Nurs Stud

Faculty of Nursing, Chiang Mai University, 110/406 Inthawaroros road, SriPhum District, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand; Faculty of Health, Charles Darwin University, Ellengowan Drive, Darwin 0810, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: October 2023

Objectives: To investigate the efficacy of the Thai Health Improvement Profile intervention for preventing clinically significant weight gain in people with early stage psychosis.

Methods: We undertook a randomised controlled trial from 10/2018 to 05/2021. Participants with early stage psychosis (<5 year duration) were recruited using convenience sampling from the caseloads of community psychiatric nurses in Thailand and randomly allocated to either the Thai Health Improvement Profile intervention or treatment as usual group following baseline assessment. Outcome assessors were blind to group allocation, whereas participants were not. Participants in the intervention group received three monthly (five in total) systematic health checks using the Thai Health Improvement Profile tool, which was used to develop a personal health plan in collaboration with a family member/carer. Nurses supported participants to implement the health plan using behaviour change techniques derived from motivational interviewing. The treatment as usual group consisted of medication and psychosocial support, and no additional intervention was provided. The primary outcome was weight gain (defined as a greater or equal to 7 % increase in weight against baseline) within 1 year.

Results: Fifty-three participants were allocated to the intervention and an equal number to the treatment as usual group. Primary outcome data were available for 30 participants in each group at the 12 month follow-up. We undertook an intention to treat analysis with multiple imputation (to handle the missing data) for the primary outcome. The treatment as usual group was found to have higher odds than the Thai Health Improvement Profile intervention group of gaining ≥7 % of baseline body weight (OR = 6.52; 95 % CI: 1.88-22.65, p = 0.004).

Conclusions: The Thai Health Improvement Profile intervention was effective at preventing weight gain in people with early stage psychosis at one year, though attrition was relatively high. The results highlight the need for community mental health nurses to adopt a holistic approach, the potential benefits of conducting regular comprehensive health checks and the importance of involving family members when aiming to improve the physical health of people diagnosed with early stage psychosis. A large definitive multi-site randomised controlled trial of the Thai Health Improvement Profile with a longer follow-up is now justified.

Trial Registration: Prospectively registered with the Thai Clinical Trials Registry (reference: TCTR20180305002).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2023.104570DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

early stage
12
efficacy thai
8
thai health
8
health improvement
8
improvement profile
8
profile intervention
8
intervention preventing
8
weight gain
8
gain people
8
people early
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!