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Open Access 01-12-2023 | Study protocol

A short, animated storytelling video about sodium intake as a major cardiovascular risk factor and recommendations for a healthy diet: an online, randomized, controlled trial

Authors: A Supady, K Nguyen, M Abd El Aziz, C Überreiter, T Bärnighausen, M Adam

Published in: Trials | Issue 1/2023

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Abstract

Background

Increased uptake of sodium is a major cause for cardiovascular disease and mortality. Reduction of daily salt intake below a reference level of 2 g per day (the equivalent to 5 g salt/day) is known to effectively reduce cardiovascular mortality. The widespread use of social media, with a constant increase in video consumption, is opening new avenues for the dissemination of innovative and scalable approaches to health-related information and recommendations for a healthy diet, such as via video interventions with short animated stories (SAS).

Objective

This study will evaluate the effect of a sodium intake-SAS video intervention on immediate and medium-term knowledge about dietary sodium. Beyond that, immediate and medium-term effects on behavioral expectation to reduce sodium intake as well as voluntary post-trial engagement with the video content will be examined.

Methods

In this 4-armed, parallel, randomized controlled trial, 10,000 adult, US participants will be randomly assigned to (1) a short, animated storytelling intervention video on sodium as a cardiovascular disease risk factor followed by surveys assessing the facts on sodium and cardiovascular disease conveyed in the video (2) the surveys only, (3) an attention placebo control video followed by the before mentioned surveys, and (4) an arm that is exposed to neither the video nor the surveys. Two weeks later, participants in all four arms will complete all of the surveys.

Results

Primary outcomes are the immediate and medium-term effects of the short, animated storytelling intervention video on knowledge about dietary sodium. Secondary outcomes are immediate and medium-term effects of the short, animated storytelling intervention on behavioral expectation to reduce sodium intake as well as voluntary post-trial engagement with the video content.

Conclusion

This study will extend the knowledge on the effects of short, animated storytelling for the containment of the global cardiovascular disease burden. Knowledge on the groups that may be more likely to voluntarily engage with SAS video content will help to improve targeting of future interventions towards audiences at risk.

Trial registration {2a}

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05735457. Registered on February 21, 2023.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
A short, animated storytelling video about sodium intake as a major cardiovascular risk factor and recommendations for a healthy diet: an online, randomized, controlled trial
Authors
A Supady
K Nguyen
M Abd El Aziz
C Überreiter
T Bärnighausen
M Adam
Publication date
01-12-2023
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Trials / Issue 1/2023
Electronic ISSN: 1745-6215
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13063-023-07418-6

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