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Whole food plant-based nutrition education for Healthy Eating (PLANT Trial)

N/A
Waitlist Available
Led By Tamiko Katsumoto, MD
Research Sponsored by Stanford University
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be older than 18 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up 6 weeks
Awards & highlights

PLANT Trial Summary

This trial aims to study if a multimodal education program can help busy physicians adopt a whole-food, plant-based diet, which can help prevent/reverse 70% of chronic diseases. It will assess change in diet, mindset and skills to adopt & counsel patients on this diet.

PLANT Trial Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~6 weeks
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and 6 weeks for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Outcome measures can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary outcome measures
Change in Diet ID score from baseline to Week 6
Change in mindset about WFPBD from baseline to week 6
Change in state of change (motivation/confidence) from baseline to week 6

PLANT Trial Design

2Treatment groups
Active Control
Group I: Whole food plant-based nutrition educationActive Control1 Intervention
Providers will receive an educational intervention on whole food plant based nutrition that will last 6 weeks.
Group II: Delayed interventionActive Control1 Intervention
Providers will receive a educational intervention on whole food plant based nutrition that will last 6 weeks.

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Who is running the clinical trial?

Stanford UniversityLead Sponsor
2,374 Previous Clinical Trials
17,332,825 Total Patients Enrolled
Tamiko Katsumoto, MDPrincipal InvestigatorStanford University

Frequently Asked Questions

These questions and answers are submitted by anonymous patients, and have not been verified by our internal team.

Are there still open slots available for this clinical experiment?

"Per the information presented on clinicaltrials.gov, this particular medical trial is not currently looking for patients to be enrolled. The study was initially posted on April 1st 2023 and revised most recently in early January of this year. Despite that, there remain 63 other trials recruiting participants at present."

Answered by AI
~56 spots leftby Mar 2025