| Literature DB >> 29449953 |
Samantha B van Beurden1, Sally I Simmons1, Jason C H Tang2, Avril J Mewse3, Charles Abraham1, Colin J Greaves1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The internet is a potentially promising medium for delivering weight loss interventions. The current study sought to explore factors that might influence primary care patients' initial uptake and continued use (up to four-weeks) of such programmes to help inform the development of novel, or refinement of existing, weight management interventions.Entities:
Keywords: E-health; Internet; Obesity; Primary care; Qualitative research; Weight loss
Year: 2018 PMID: 29449953 PMCID: PMC5810085 DOI: 10.1186/s40608-018-0184-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Obes ISSN: 2052-9538
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| (1) desire to lose weight |
| (2) aged 35–60 |
| (3) BMI of 30 to 45 kg/m2 |
| (4) able to access to the internet via a computer or other device. |
| (1) medical-conditions, such as coronary artery disease, type I diabetes or insulin-treated type 2 diabetes, stroke or cognitive impairment, terminal illness |
| (2) unable to read, write, or understand English |
| (3) learning difficulties |
| (4) taking medication that could affect weight. |
Fig. 1Participant identification, recruitment, and follow-up
Participant characteristics and website choice
| Men | Women | All | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 35–57 | 40–57 | 35–57 |
| (M = 47.3) | (M = 51.4) | (M = 49.5) | |
| BMI | 32–44.8 | 30.4–43.4 | 30–47.8 |
| (M = 36.2) | (M = 35.7) | (M = 35.9) | |
| Website Choice | |||
| Livestrong | 2 | 1 | 3 |
| LiveWell | 2 | 6 | 8 |
| SparkPeople | 2 | 7 | 9 |
Key stages of patient journey
| (1) initial interest and website choice |
| (2) engagement with and use of the website |
| (3) implementation of changes |
| (4) continued use of the website and behaviour change. Within these stages a number of themes were identified. |
Main facilitators and barriers identified across the key stages
| Facilitator/Barrier to website use | Influencing factor |
|---|---|
| Facilitators | (1) Motivation (Stage 1–4); from Tracking features and Email reminders. |
| (2) Personal preferences (Stage 1&2); Appeal of website; Email reminders | |
| Barriers | (1) Effort (Stage 2–4); Time and commitment (Stage 3) |
| (2) Lack of novel or useful information (Stage 4) | |
| (3) Accessibility and disposability; (Stage 4) | |
| (4) Email Reminders (Stage 2) | |
| (5) Perceived target group (Stage 4); Appeal of website (Stage 1) |
Recommendations for future development and refinement of internet-based weight loss interventions
| 1. Future internet-based interventions that are designed to facilitate weight loss consultations given in primary care settings should be personally tailored where possible, to allow for choice of style (e.g. technical, health-focused) and delivery formats (e.g. internet, smartphone), and ideally allowing users to adjust the number of reminders to prevent users from feeling harassed. |
| 2. To maintain interest, content and features need to be novel (e.g., temptation resistance strategies) and updated, yet require very little effort from the user to find and use (i.e. good organisation of detailed information allowing users to find what they want easily). |
| 3. Tracking features should be appealing and require less effort from the user than current methods (e.g., use of smartphone barcode scanners, auto-tracking of activity using devices, tracking weight or success with planned changes, rather than total calories consumed). |
| 4. Lifestyle changes should be presented in a manner that reduces the perceived effort and time to implement such changes (i.e., reduce portion size vs weighing and logging every ingredient). |
| 5. The intervention may need to address issues of motivation and prioritisation to support more resource-intensive changes. |
| 6. Particular care is needed to ensure that social support elements of interventions provide a safe environment in which to disclose sensitive information. |
| 7. The use of face-to-face support alongside web-based support may be advantageous when implementing internet-based interventions in primary care settings. |