Community Volunteers Promoting Physical Activity Among Cancer Survivors



Status:Completed
Conditions:Breast Cancer, Cancer
Therapuetic Areas:Oncology
Healthy:No
Age Range:Any
Updated:11/18/2012
Start Date:January 2010
End Date:September 2012
Contact:Marissa Waldemore, B.A.
Email:mwaldemore@lifespan.org
Phone:401-793-8203

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Physical activity programs, when offered in research settings, have been shown to improve
quality of life and reduce fatigue among breast cancer survivors. The investigators are
training Reach to Recovery volunteers at the American Cancer Society (New England Division)
to provide a 12-week telephone-based physical activity program (RTR Plus) for breast cancer
survivors. The comparison group of survivors will receive Reach to Recovery services (RTR).
Physical activity, fatigue and other outcomes will be examined among 108 breast cancer
survivors at the start of the program, at 12 weeks and 24 weeks. If the physical activity
program is found to be effective, there is a potential for dissemination among the 13,000
Reach to Recovery volunteers across the U.S.


The current study, a randomized controlled trial, represents the next step in our efforts to
extend the research on physical activity to the community setting; community volunteers will
deliver the intervention, thereby making physical activity interventions much more
accessible to survivors. In partnership with the National ACS office (Atlanta, GA) and the
New England ACS Division, researchers at the Miriam Hospital will share their skills,
experience and resources to examine the effects of training RTR volunteers to deliver brief
physical activity counseling to breast cancer survivors. Fifteen to twenty RTR volunteers
will be trained to offer a 12-week telephone-based PA program as a supplement to 12-week RTR
services (RTR Plus) vs. delivering the standard 12-week RTR services (RTR) to 108 breast
cancer survivors. Assessments of physical activity, fatigue and other outcomes will be
completed at baseline, 12 weeks and 24 weeks. Data on side-effects of the intervention and
costs of intervention delivery will be tracked. If the proposed randomized trial
demonstrates positive effects, the results will be used to design and support a
dissemination trial of the effects of physical activity promotion to enhance cancer recovery
in a community setting.

Inclusion criteria:

- Women aged 21 years or over with Stage 0-3 breast cancer will be eligible if they:

- Are requesting Reach to Recovery services from the American Cancer Society.

- Have been diagnosed in the past 5 years with Stage 0-3 breast cancer.

- Are able to read and speak English.

- Are ambulatory.

- Are sedentary (i.e., do not meet recommendations for moderate-intensity PA [30
minutes/ day or more for at least 5 days/ week] or vigorous-intensity PA [20
minutes/day or more for at least 3 days/week].

- Are able to walk unassisted.

- Have access to a telephone.

Exclusion criteria:

- Women with:

- More advanced disease (Stage 4).

- Medical or psychiatric problems (e.g., substance abuse, coronary artery disease,
peripheral vascular disease, diabetes, and orthopedic problems) that may
interfere with protocol adherence will not be included.

- Participants will be asked to provide consent for medical chart review to extract
disease and treatment variables. Eligible participants will obtain medical clearance
from their physicians.
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