Common design elements of the Girls health Enrichment Multi-site Studies (GEMS)

Publication Description
The Girls health Enrichment Multi-site Studies (GEMS) was a multi-center research program created for the purpose of testing interventions designed to prevent excess weight gain by African-American girls, as they enter and proceed through puberty. However, GEMS was not a "multi-center clinical trial" in the usual sense. Although these studies applied similar eligibility criteria, observed a similar follow-up schedule, and followed a similar measurement protocol, important differences existed, as well. Each field center developed its own intervention(s) and corresponding control, and tailored its study to the specific hypothesis being tested. Therefore, the study populations were somewhat different, with recruitment strategies that varied accordingly, and supplemental evaluations appropriate to the specific interventions were conducted on a site-specific basis. The purpose of this paper is to describe the common design elements of the GEMS Phase 1 pilot studies. This report presents the basic study design, a brief overview of the interventions, the measurements taken and their rationale, and procedures both for compiling the collaborative database, and performing site-specific analyses.

Primary Author
Rochon,James
Klesges,Robert C.
Story,Mary
Robinson,Thomas N.
Baranowski,Tom
Obarzanek,Eva
Mitchell,Megan

Volume
13

Issue
1 Suppl 1

Start Page
6

Publisher
International Society on Hypertension in Blacks

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12713207

PMID
12713207



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Ethnicity & disease

Publication Year
2003

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
1049-510X