| Literature DB >> 30291100 |
Anna Haste1,2,3, Ashley J Adamson1,2,3, Elaine McColl1, Vera Araujo-Soares1, Ruth Bell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rising obesity levels remain a major public health concern due to the clear link with several comorbidities such as diabetes. Diabetes now affects 6% of the UK population. Modest weight loss of 5% to 10% has been shown to be associated with significant reductions in blood sugar, lipid, and blood pressure levels. Men have been shown to be attracted to programs that do not require extensive face-to-face time commitments, illustrating the potential audience available for health behavior change via the Web.Entities:
Keywords: Web-based intervention; diabetes mellitus, type 2; feasibility studies; men; men's health; pilot RCT; pilot projects; process evaluation; randomized controlled trial; type 2 diabetes; weight loss
Year: 2017 PMID: 30291100 PMCID: PMC6238853 DOI: 10.2196/diabetes.7430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Diabetes ISSN: 2371-4379
Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklista for the My Dietitian Web-based weight loss intervention.
| TIDieR checklist item | Description | |
| Consultant feedback | The health care professionals received training on setting SMARTb goals with the participants and putting together action and coping plans, addressing barrier identification, and problem solving. An initial one-off consultation with the dietitian face-to-face was then followed by a structure of scheduled Web-based consultations, with the patient also able to contact the professional in between if needed. The user received a notification that feedback was available for them to read. Consultations provided the user with information in relation to their weight status and recommendations on how to improve their behaviors. Example food diaries provided users with instructions on how to perform the behavior. (BCTc: provide feedback on performance; provide instruction on how to perform the behavior; provide information on consequences of behavior in general; provide information on consequences of behavior to the individual; action planning; relapse prevention and coping planning; barrier identification and problem solving; goal setting: behavior and outcome). | |
| Daily food intake input | Type and amount of food and time consumed. Information could be converted into calories consumed and represented in a pie chart showing percentages for food types consumed. (BCT: prompt self-monitoring of behavior; provide feedback on performance). | |
| Physical activity input | Type, time, and intensity of any completed physical activity, which could be translated into calories burned. (BCT: prompt self-monitoring of behavior; provide feedback on performance). | |
| Diet budget | Daily outline of calories consumed, calories burned and the allowance they have remaining. (BCT: Prompt self-monitoring of behavior; Provide feedback on performance). | |
| Body measurements | Participants had the option to record waist and weight measurements and amount of steps taken presented in a graph to display participant’s progress as part of the intervention. (BCT: prompt self-monitoring of behavior and behavioral outcomes; provide feedback on performance). | |
| My community | Users could interact through forums, diaries, and chat rooms. Recipes and relevant articles were available to users. (BCT: plan social support and social change). | |
| Who provided | Registered dietitians and exercise experts (Health Improvement Specialists) | |
| How | Individually delivered via the Web | |
| Where | A one-off face-to-face meeting with the dietitian in the participants’ homes. Then solely Web-based delivery. | |
| When and how much | 12-month intervention. The initial one-off face-to-face meeting with the dietitian was conducted in an hour-long appointment slot. Dietitians provided Web-based consultations on a maximum weekly basis for the first 3 months (n=12) and then monthly for the last 9 months (n=9, total maximum planned dietitian contact n=21). Exercise experts provided Web-based consultations on a monthly basis for the first 3 months (n=3) and then every 3 months for the last 9 months (n=3, total planned maximum exercise expert contact n=6). Total maximum consultations over the first 3 months n=15, total maximum consultations at the end of the 12-month intervention n=27. The content of the consultations was at the professional discretion of dietitians and exercise experts. | |
| Tailoring | Every intervention participant received personalized Web-based consultations from their designated dietitian and exercise expert. This feedback was based on participant input on the website. | |
| Modifications | No modifications were made during the study | |
| Planned | A protocol of Web-based consultation provision was created for the dietitians and exercise experts. Fidelity was assessed by monitoring website use and consultation provision by dietitians and exercise experts. | |
| Actual | Website use data identified the number of delivered consultations in comparison with the number planned before the start of the intervention | |
| Included BCTs from CALO-RE taxonomyd | Prompt self-monitoring of behavior | |
aBased on Hoffmann et al [38].
bSMART: specific, measurable, agreed upon, realistic, and time-based goals.
cBCT: behavior change technique.
dCALO-RE: Coventry, Aberdeen, and London-Refined taxonomy [29].
Figure 1My Dietitian website screenshot of dietary intake entry page.
Figure 2Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) recruitment flow diagram.
Baseline demographic and anthropometric measures by intervention status.
| Outcome measure | Control (n=28) | Intervention (n=33) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ)a | 61 (54.5-66.8) | 58 (50-67.5) | |
| Range (min-max)b | 39 (40-79) | 41 (37-78) | |
| White ethnicity, n (%) | 28 (100) | 33 (100) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 12 (11-12) | 12 (10-14) | |
| Range (min-max) | 4 (12-16) | 6 (12-18) | |
| Employed | 11 (39) | 9 (27) | |
| Self-employed | 1 (4) | 2 (6) | |
| Unemployed | 3 (11) | 6 (18) | |
| Retired | 11 (39) | 14 (42) | |
| Caregiver, sick leave, disabled | 2 (7) | 2 (6) | |
| Married or in a relationship | 25 (89) | 24 (73) | |
| Single | 1 (4) | 4 (12) | |
| Divorced or separated | 2 (7) | 3 (9) | |
| Widowed | 0 (0) | 2 (6) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 109.3 (96.9-119.0) | 106.5 (100.1-115.4) | |
| Range (min-max) | 45.2 (87.2-132.3) | 43.2 (86.6-129.8) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 34.4 (31.6-37.0) | 33.3 (31.6-36.4) | |
| Range (min-max) | 9.1 (30.3-39.4) | 8.2 (30.4-38.6) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 119.5 (114-126.8) | 118.0 (112-124) | |
| Range (min-max) | 32 (103-135) | 33 (100-133) | |
aLQ-UQ: lower quartile to upper quartile.
bmin-max: minimum to maximum.
Anthropometric measures across assessment times by group (control vs intervention).
| Outcome measure | 3 months | 12 months | |||
| Control (n=16) | Intervention (n=24) | Control (n=12) | Intervention (n=20) | ||
| Median (LQ-UQ)a | 105.7 (92.3-114.9) | 102.2 (97.4-110.3) | 100.7 (91.9-118.1) | 99.2 (90.7-106.8) | |
| Range (min-max)b | 38.6 (85.5-124.1) | 44.3 (84.4-128.7) | 40.3 (86.1-126.4) | 46.8 (81.2-128) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | –2.2 (–3.7 to –0.9) | –2.35 (–4.5 to –0.9) | –2.5 (–5.0 to 0.2) | –4.3 (–7.8 to –1.0) | |
| Range (min-max) | 9.7 (–8.6 to 1.1) | 10.3 (–8.4 to 1.9) | 16.1 (–12.6 to 3.5) | 21.4 (–18.5 to 2.9) | |
| 5% weight loss, n (%) | 3 (19) | 3 (13) | 4 (33) | 8 (40) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 33.3 (30.8-36.1) | 32.2 (31.1-34.5) | 33.3 (29.9-36.8) | 31.3 (29.8-33.2) | |
| Range (min-max) | 8.7 (28.7-37.4) | 9.9 (28.4-38.3) | 8.9 (29.3-38.2) | 9.9 (27.5-37.4) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | –0.7 (–1.1 to –0.2) | –0.9 (–1.4 to –0.2) | –0.8 (–1.6 to 0.8) | –1.7 (–2.7 to –0.3) | |
| Range (min-max) | 3.2 (–3.0 to 0.2) | 3.4 (–2.8 to 0.6) | 5 (–3.9 to 1.1) | 7.8 (–6.5 to 1.3) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 118.5 (109.8-124.8) | 112.5 (108.5-122.8) | 117 (112.3-126.8) | 112 (107-121) | |
| Range (min-max) | 22 (106-128) | 26 (102-128) | 31 (103-134) | 21 (103-124) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | –3.0 (–1.3 to –5.0) | –2.0 (–1 to –3) | –2.0 (–3.8 to –1) | –3.5 (–7 to –1.3) | |
| Range (min-max) | 11 (–9 to 2) | 14 (–11 to 3) | 12.5 (–11 to 2) | 19 (–17 to 2) | |
aLQ-UQ: lower quartile to upper quartile.
bmin-max: minimum to maximum.
cBMI: body mass index.
Website use by intervention participants over the course of the study.
| Participants | Baseline (n=33) | 3 months (n=33) | 12 months (n=33) |
| Users, n (%) | 16 (48) | 16 (48) | 12 (36) |
| Nonusers, n (%) | 17 (52) | 17 (52) | 21 (64) |
Website use data averages per intervention participant.
| Type of use | 0-3 months (n=28) | 3-12 months (n=19) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ)a | 13 (12-15) | 22 (20-25) | |
| Range (min-max)b | 11 (5-16) | 15 (14-29) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 12 (10-12) | 20 (18-22) | |
| Range (min-max) | 10 (4-14) | 10 (13-23) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 2 (1-2) | 2 (1-3) | |
| Range (min-max) | 4 (0-4) | 6 (0-6) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 1 (0-8) | 9 (0-32) | |
| Range (min-max) | 34 (0-34) | 75 (0-75) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 1 (0-7) | 7 (0-29) | |
| Range (min-max) | 33 (0-33) | 68 (0-68) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 0 (0-1) | 1 (0-2) | |
| Range (min-max) | 7 (0-7) | 7 (0-7) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 8 (1-59) | 99 (3-246) | |
| Range (min-max) | 82 (0-82) | 330 (0-330) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | 3 (0-26) | 22 (2-124) | |
| Range (min-max) | 69 (0-69) | 262 (0-262) | |
| Median (LQ-UQ) | N/Ac | 43 (12-167) | |
| Range (min-max) | N/A | 490 (1-491) | |
aLQ-UQ: lower quartile to upper quartile.
bmin-max: minimum to maximum.
cN/A: not available.
Summary of findings against 14 methodological issues for feasibility researcha.
| Methodological issues | Findings | Evidence | Suggested improvements for a full trial | |
| 1. | Did the feasibility/pilot study allow a sample size calculation for the main trial? | Measure of variability and retention rates was identified. Sample size for main trial was calculated. | Target of 60 was achieved. | Sample sizes were calculated to inform main trial requirements. Number of practices required: 12 (based on average of 138 eligible patients identified per practice). Number of participants needing to be identified and contacted: 1587 (based on consent rate of 6.3%). Number needing to be randomly allocated: 100 (based on retention rate of 52%). Number needed at 12 months to detect target difference: 54 (27 per arm). |
| 2. | What factors influenced eligibility and what proportion of those approached were eligible? | High numbers of eligible men (968) were identified from GPbdatabase searches. | 5 out of 61 approached were ineligible. | Inaccurate body mass index records in GP databases led to 5 ineligible participants, a small number but an issue to consider when contacting general practices. |
| 3. | Was recruitment successful? | Recruitment was successful. | Target of 60 was achieved. Response to study invitation was 9% of identified men. | Recruitment via GP database searches was effective. Invitation letters could be revised, to be based on behavior change principles, to potentially increase response rate and those recruited. |
| 4. | Did eligible participants consent? | Conversion to consent was high. | Of the 61 eligible men, all were recruited. | The consent process was successful and could stay the same for a main trial. |
| 5. | Were participants successfully randomized and did randomization yield equality in groups? | Randomization worked well. | Allocation was concealed. Groups were of fairly equal size and were well balanced on stratification variables. | Randomization and stratification worked well and could progress into a main trial. |
| 6. | Were blinding procedures adequate? | Blinding was not possible and was not planned. | Blinding was not implemented. | Blinding would not be possible in a main trial. |
| 7. | Did participants adhere to the intervention? | Fewer than half of the participants adhered to the intervention website. | 16 out of 33 (48%) allocated intervention participants actively used the intervention website, with 12 out of 33 (36%) still engaged at 12 months. | The use of incentives could aid both adherence and retention. Improvements to the website, suggested in the process evaluation, were mentioned in relation to increasing adherence. |
| 8. | Was the intervention acceptable to the participants? | The intervention appeared to be acceptable to participants. | All eligible participants consented once full study information was explained. The majority of participants interviewed believed the intervention to be feasible to implement within the UK National Health Service. | A Web-based weight loss intervention was identified as acceptable. |
| 9. | Was it possible to calculate intervention costs and duration? | These were not assessed within this pilot trial. | No costs were calculated. | Cost analysis would be conducted in a main trial to assess the cost effectiveness of the intervention. |
| 10. | Were outcome assessments completed? | Anthropometric measures were completed well. | Anthropometric measures were completed by all participants remaining in the study. | Face-to-face anthropometric measures could be used in a future trial. |
| 11. | Were outcomes measured those that were the most appropriate outcomes? | Outcome measures used did assess main areas of interest. | Anthropometric measures allowed health outcomes to be measured. | Outcome measures would be suitable to measure in a full trial. |
| 12. | Was retention to the study good? | Attrition was substantial. | Remaining men: 3 months: 73% intervention, 57% control 12 months: 61% intervention, 45% control. | Incentives could be used, as in previous research, to aid both adherence and retention. |
| 13. | Were the logistics of running a multicenter trial assessed? | Logistics for running a multicenter trial identified no problems during the trial. | However, the number of participants recruited from each general practice was largely influenced by the number of eligible participants identified in the GP database search; 50 of the 61 (82%) recruited were from the 3 practices where the greatest number of eligible participants were identified. | The logistics for running a multicenter trial were effective and could be used in a main trial. Focusing on larger practices may be most effective. |
| 14. | Did all components of the protocol work together? | Components had strong synergy. | No difficulties were identified in the ability to implement any of the study processes. Participants were recruited, were randomly allocated, and progressed into the appropriate trial arm smoothly. | The protocol allowed all components to work well together. |
aBased on Shanyinde et al [44].
bGP: general practitioner.