PC SHOP

  • Research type

    Research Study

  • Full title

    Primary Care Shopping Intervention for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention

  • IRAS ID

    214999

  • Contact name

    Carmen Piernas Sanchez

  • Contact email

    carmen.piernas-sanchez@phc.ox.ac.uk

  • Sponsor organisation

    University of Oxford

  • Duration of Study in the UK

    1 years, 2 months, 31 days

  • Research summary

    Cardiovascular disease (CVD), including heart attacks and strokes, is the leading cause of death in the UK and is strongly influenced by diet. Eating too much saturated fat increases the amount of ‘bad’ LDL-cholesterol in the blood, which increases the risk of heart disease. Previous studies have shown that reducing the intake of saturated fat (mostly fats from animal sources such as butter or meat), by swapping some foods for others that are lower in saturated fat, can lead to big reductions in the amount of LDL-cholesterol. However, these studies have achieved success either by giving specific foods to people or by providing intensive support and advice from nutrition specialists.
    The PC-SHOP study will develop and test a new intervention, involving brief oral and written advice from a health professional at the GP practice together with regular information on the saturated fat content of food purchases. We will achieve this by partnering with Tesco. People using their loyalty card will receive a personalised statement of the saturated fat content of their food purchases. They will be able to use this information, together with the written materials they have received, to swap foods which contain a lot of saturated fat for healthier alternatives. We will recruit people who have had a recent blood test that shows they have raised LDL cholesterol and who are willing to try and change their diet. We will compare the two intervention groups with usual care. People will be in the study for 12 weeks. At this point we will assess whether the amount of saturated fat in their food purchases has decreased. If this intervention is feasible in practice and seems to help people change their diet we will continue to plan a bigger study to measure changes in LDL-cholesterol.

  • REC name

    South Central - Oxford C Research Ethics Committee

  • REC reference

    17/SC/0168

  • Date of REC Opinion

    12 May 2017

  • REC opinion

    Favourable Opinion