| Literature DB >> 29988461 |
Dorota Juszczyk1, Fiona Gillison2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Improving diet as a means of reducing the development of disease states and obesity is a public health priority. Although a growing number of countries have adopted policies to improve dietary patterns at the population level, as yet there are no established means of successfully bringing about change, suggesting that new approaches are needed. This study aimed to investigate the feasibility and proof of concept of a theoretically informed healthy eating intervention based on the model of successful month-long alcohol reduction or stop smoking campaigns (i.e. a mass-participation 'challenge' format).Entities:
Keywords: Healthy eating; Obesity; Online intervention; Social marketing campaign
Year: 2018 PMID: 29988461 PMCID: PMC6025836 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-018-0310-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Behaviour change techniques as implemented within Juicy June
| Behaviour change technique | Practical strategy |
|---|---|
| - 1.1 Goal setting (behaviour)/1.4 Action planning | - Participants prompted to decide specifically what snack to swap with what healthier alternative prior to the start. |
| - 2.2 Feedback on behaviour | - Dietary analysis provided following baseline measures in the format of a graph depicting personal intake alongside government guidelines using traffic light colour coding. |
| - 2.3. Self-monitoring of behaviour | - Hard-copies of self-monitoring sheets provided (to record each day snack-swap successfully achieved). Suggested to participants that this be attached to the fridge or other highly visible place. |
| - 4.1 Instruction on how to do a behaviour | - Clear information of what is intended by a ‘snack swap’, and what constitutes a healthy snack. Provided via email. |
| - 3.3 Non-specific social support | - General encouragement provided in standardised materials (including reminders to self-monitor). Weekly contact asking how participants had got on. |
| - 5.1 Information about health consequences | - Provided in study materials provided before and during the intervention |
| - 7.1. Prompts/cues | - Provision of a hard-copy calendar; weekly texts to cue preparation for snack swapping (e.g. shopping for target snacks) |
| - 7.2 Reduce prompts/cues | - Participants asked not to stock unhealthy snacks at home/in the workplace |
| - Promote autonomy support | - Study materials presented using non-controlling language (i.e. ‘you can, you may choose to’ rather than ‘you should, you must’); promotion of choice (in what aspects of diet to substitute); presentation of a rationale for change; provision of structure for behaviour change through outlining a simple snack-swap. |
Notes: Behaviour change techniques are numbered according to the 93-item BCT taxonomy where included within this [62]. Autonomy support (aligned with Self-Determination Theory) is not listed within the taxonomy
Demographic characteristic and perceived health status of the sample (N = 91)
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Gender (% females) | 78 (85.7) |
| Ethnicity (% White) | 81 (89.0) |
| Employment (% full time) | 66 (72.5) |
| Smoking status (% never smoked) | 71 (78.0) |
| Special diet (% no special diet) | 73 (80.2) |
| Health rating (% fair/good) | 65 (71.7) |
| Weight self-perception (% somewhat overweight/very overweight) | 61 (67.0) |
| Weight concern (% quite concerned/very concerned) | 53 (58.1) |
| Weight harmful to health (% not at all harmful/not very harmful) | 59 (64.8) |
| Weight control (% actively doing things to try to avoid gaining weight) | 36 (39.6) |