| Literature DB >> 27855663 |
Shane A Norris1, Julius Cheah Chee Ho2, Aswir Abd Rashed3, Vibeke Vinding4, Jutta K H Skau5, Regien Biesma6,7, Jens Aagaard-Hansen5,8, Mark Hanson9, Priya Matzen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Malaysia is experiencing a nutrition transition with burgeoning obesity, particularly in women, and a growing prevalence of non-communicable disease. These health burdens have severe implications not only for adult health but also across generations. Pre-conception health promotion could address the intergenerational risk of metabolic disease. This paper describes the development of the "Jom Mama" intervention using Intervention Mapping (IM). The Jom Mama intervention aims to improve the health of young adult couples in Malaysia prior to conception.Entities:
Keywords: Gestational diabetes mellitus; Intervention mapping; Malaysia; Metabolic disease risk; Reproductive health
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27855663 PMCID: PMC5114777 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3827-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Behavioral outcomes and change objectives
| Behavioural outcomes to reduce metabolic disease risk | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy balanced diet | Increase physical activity | Reduce sedentary behaviour | Reduce stress | |
| Change objectives | Increase consumption of fruits and vegetables | Achieving a minimum level of 30 mins of moderate to vigorous exercise per day to enhance fitness | Break up sitting time | Improve time management skills |
Table describing the behavioural outcomes identified and the change objectives targeted for the Jom Mama intervention
Fig. 1The Theory of Triadic Influence and the Jom Mama trial (adapted from Flay et al. 2009). Diagram describing the usage of the Theory of Triadic Influence in the Jom Mama intervention
Fig. 2Jom Mama trial design. Overview of the trial design of the Jom Mama randomised control trial
Overview of CHP contact point meetings
| Contact point | Aims |
|---|---|
| Contact point 1 (Face-to-face) | Assessment of couples’ health risk and behaviour: risk assessment |
| Contact point 2 (Face-to-face) | Follow up on use of mobile application |
| Contact point 3 (Phone) | Follow up on use of mobile application |
| Contact point 4 (Phone) | Follow up on use of mobile application |
| Contact point 5 (Face-to-face) | Follow up on use of mobile application |
| Contact point 6 (Phone) | Follow up on progress based on previously set goals |
Details of the purpose of each contact point meeting between CHP and young couples in the Jom Mama trial