| Literature DB >> 24964294 |
Gina Merchant1, Nadir Weibel, Kevin Patrick, James H Fowler, Greg J Norman, Anjali Gupta, Christina Servetas, Karen Calfas, Ketaki Raste, Laura Pina, Mike Donohue, William G Griswold, Simon Marshall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Overweight or obesity is prevalent among college students and many gain weight during this time. Traditional face-to-face weight loss interventions have not worked well in this population. Facebook is an attractive tool for delivering weight loss interventions for college students because of its popularity, potential to deliver strategies found in successful weight loss interventions, and ability to support ongoing adaptation of intervention content.Entities:
Keywords: behavior; obesity; overweight; social behavior; social networking; students
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24964294 PMCID: PMC4090380 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.3267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Conceptual model iSIMPLE (Intention formation, Self-monitor, Make plans, Execute) used in the design of the SMART study’s Facebook campaigns for weight loss behaviors.
Defining measures of intervention exposure and engagement on Facebook.
| Intervention | Definition | Types of posts/interactions | Direction of posts/interactions | |
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| Dose delivered | Posts made by the health coach on the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page | Posts: status update, photo, link, poll,a video | Health coach to ThreeTwoMe page |
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| Feedback delivered | Health coach interactions with posts made by participants on the ThreeTwoMe Faceook page; also can be health coach interactions with comments made by participants in response to ThreeTwoMe posts | Interactions: like, comment | Health coach to participant |
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| Dose receivedb | Participant interactions with ThreeTwoMe Facebook posts delivered by the health coach | Interactions: like, comment, poll response, share | Participant to ThreeTwoMe page |
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| Participant-initiated posts | Posts made by participants on the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page | Posts: post, photo, video, link | Participant to ThreeTwoMe page |
aFacebook removed the poll feature in April 2013.
bDose received was analyzed at the post-level (post interacted with: yes/no) and at the participant-level (number of participant interactions stratified by interaction type).
Baseline characteristics of the intervention group by gender (N=199).
| Demographics | Total | Men | Women | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 22.0 (3.8) | 23.0 (4.6) | 21.6 (3.3) | |
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| White | 85 (42.7) | 22 (37.3) | 63 (45.0) |
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| Black | 7 (3.5) | 0 (0) | 7 (5.0) |
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| Asian | 45 (22.6) | 17 (28.8) | 28 (20.0) |
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| Pacific Islander | 9 (4.5) | 4 (6.8) | 5 (3.6) |
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| American Indian | 1 (0.5) | 0 (0) | 1 (0.7) |
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| Other | 52 (26.1) | 16 (27.1) | 36 (25.7) |
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| Hispanic | 63 (31.7) | 17 (28.8) | 46 (32.9) |
| Undergraduate (yes), n (%) | 159 (79.9) | 45 (76.3) | 114 (81.4) | |
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| Single | 100 (50.3) | 33 (55.9) | 77 (55.0) |
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| Engaged, committed relationship, married | 88 (45) | 26 (44.1) | 62 (44.3) |
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| Separated, divorced, widowed | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
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| Body mass index (BMI) | 28.7 (3.5) | 28.5 (4.7) | 28.8 (3.0) |
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| Waist circumference (cm) | 87.0 (10.8) | 93.1 (7.7) | 84.5 (10.9) |
Posts delivered by the ThreeTwoMe health coach and posts received by participants where received is defined as the post having been interacted with at least once.
| Dose delivered and received | Totala | Type of Facebook post | ||||
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| Status update | Photo | Link | Poll | Video |
| Dose delivered, n (% of total) | 1816 (100.00) | 802 (44.16) | 481 (26.49) | 400 (22.03) | 81 (4.46) | 52 (2.86) |
| Number of posts delivered per day, mean (SD) | 3.45 (1.96) | 1.92 (1.11) | 1.60 (1.02) | 1.44 (0.70) | 0.20 (0.30) | 1.18 (0.58) |
| Dose received, n (% of total delivered) | 1325 (72.96) | 605 (75.44) | 386 (80.25) | 228 (57.00) | 79 (97.53) | 27 (51.92) |
aData represent posts made since the start of the study’s Facebook page to the end of the eighth campaign (August 2, 2011 to May 27, 2013).
Participants’ engagement with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page by type of Facebook activity and participant engagement category of participants who ever engaged with the Facebook page (n=137).
| Engagement categorya | Total interactions | Type of Facebook interactionb | ||||
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| n=6277 | Likes | Comments | Poll responses | Shares | Posts to pagec
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| Highly active (n=32), n (%) | 5070 (80.77) | 3480 (79.36) | 1201 (85.24) | 196 (75.68) | 20 (60.60) | 173 (90.57) |
| Active (n=17), n (%) | 573 (9.13) | 442 (10.08) | 95 (6.74) | 20 (7.72) | 3 (9.09) | 5 (2.62) |
| Somewhat active (n=15), n (%) | 282 (4.49) | 204 (4.65) | 63 (4.47) | 10 (3.86) | 3 (9.09) | 2 (1.05) |
| Minimally active (n=73), n (%) | 352 (5.61) | 259 (5.91) | 50 (3.55) | 25 (9.65) | 7 (21.21) | 11 (5.76) |
aCategories are mutually exclusive. Highly active participants: interact with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page ≥1/week; active participants: interact with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page ≥2/month but <1/week; somewhat active participants: interact with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page ≥1/month but <2/month; minimally active participants: interact with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page <1/month.
bData represent quantifiable interaction with the study’s Facebook page over the first year of the study based on participants’ start date.
cPosts to page are participant-initiated posts and are independent of a post made by the health coach.
Figure 2Average daily Facebook interactions per post adjusted for the number of posts delivered.
Figure 3Average daily contribution per person per post delivered.
Participant engagement with the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page by Facebook campaign.
| Facebook campaigns | Participant engagement,a n | |||||
| Popularity rank | Popularity scoreb | Namec | Dates | Unique participants engaged | Participant interactionsd | Unique posts deliverede |
| 1 | 6.73 | No candy until Halloween! (S) | 10/18/12-10/31/12 | 51 | 269 | 40 |
| 2 | 4.28 | Gobble less! (S) | 11/19/12-11/26/12 | 33 | 107 | 25 |
| 3 | 4.15 | Summer around the world & at the Olympics (NS) | 06/21/12-09/3/12 | 75 | 893 | 215 |
| 4 | 4.04 | Step it up! Pedometer challenge (S) | 02/01/13-02/28/13 | 51 | 558 | 138 |
| 5 | 3.60 | Motivation (NS) | 01/15/13-01/30/13 | 53 | 234 | 65 |
| 6 | 3.44 | Eat right your way (NS) | 03/01/13-03/30/13 | 53 | 495 | 144 |
| 7 | 2.27 | Get fit anywhere! (S) | 04/01/13-04/26/13 | 43 | 298 | 131 |
| 8 | 1.11 | Healthy habits (NS) | 05/13/13 -05/27/13 | 28 | 77 | 69 |
aData represent all Facebook interactions during campaigns since the start of the study’s Facebook page to the end of the eighth campaign (August 2, 2011 to May 27, 2013); total number of interactions with the ThreeTwoMe page outside of campaigns was 4965.
bPopularity score = # participant interactions / # unique posts delivered.
cS: sequenced; NS: nonsequenced.
dIncludes all likes, comments, shares, and poll answers made in response to ThreeTwoMe posts as well as participant-initiated posts (ie, “posts to page”). Posts to page were adjusted for campaign duration and were included in this total because most posts to page were made in response to campaign requests.
eUnique posts delivered are consistently smaller than Participant interactions because the same post could have been interacted with more than 1 time.
Figure 4Sequenced Facebook campaign content: Behavior change techniques delivered through Facebook posts.
Figure 5Nonsequenced Facebook campaign content: Participant-inititated posts.
Campaign details for 2 sequenced and 1 nonsequenced campaigns.
| Namea | Description | Pledging | Dose receivedb |
| Gobble less! (S) | The campaign focused on mindful eating, encouraging participants to be more aware of what, how much, and why they were eating. Tips for how to eat more mindfully included taking eating breaks by talking with friends and family at the table, waiting until swallowing before taking a second bite, and putting the fork down between bites. | 10.6% (21/199) publically pledged to participate by responding to a poll on the ThreeTwoMe Facebook page | 76.0% (19/25) |
| Step it up! Pedometer challenge (S) | Participants were prompted to wear their pedometer to learn their baseline daily steps and encouraged to reach 10,000 steps per day by the end of the campaign by increasing their steps by 10% each week. Participants were given tables with precalculated weekly step increases. The health coach posed 3 mini-challenges during the campaign, aimed at helping participants’ action plan and find fun and creative ways to increase their daily steps. | 9.0% (18/199) publically pledged to participate by posting a picture with their pedometer and/or by ‘liking’ a reminder post to take part in the campaign | 71.7% (99/138) |
| Summer around the world & At the Olympicsc (NS) | The campaign focused on active travel and had a virtual scavenger hunt whereby participants earned points for completing various challenges, such as being active alone or with friends, and cooking healthy meals. Participants submitted photos or videos as proof they completed the challenge. Another campaign theme was “Take ThreeTwoMe with you all summer long!” whereby participants were asked to take pictures with a ThreeTwoMe postcard while being physically active or eating well. | There was no pledging because this was a nonsequenced campaign | 75.8% (163/215) |
aS: sequenced; NS: nonsequenced.
bDose received is percent of posts participant(s) interacted with ≥1 time (ie, liked, commented, or shared) relative to number of posts delivered for the campaign=(# of posts interacted with/# of posts delivered)*100%.
cThis was the study’s first campaign.