| Literature DB >> 30909484 |
Floriana Mandracchia1, Elisabet Llauradó2, Lucia Tarro3,4, Josep Maria Del Bas5, Rosa Maria Valls6, Anna Pedret7,8, Petia Radeva9,10, Lluís Arola11,12, Rosa Solà13,14,15, Noemi Boqué16.
Abstract
A wide range of chronic diseases could be prevented through healthy lifestyle choices, such as consuming five portions of fruits and vegetables daily, although the majority of the adult population does not meet this recommendation. The use of mobile phone applications for health purposes has greatly increased; these applications guide users in real time through various phases of behavioural change. This review aimed to assess the potential of self-monitoring mobile phone health (mHealth) applications to increase fruit and vegetable intake. PubMed and Web of Science were used to conduct this systematized review, and the inclusion criteria were: randomized controlled trials evaluating mobile phone applications focused on increasing fruit and/or vegetable intake as a primary or secondary outcome performed from 2008 to 2018. Eight studies were included in the final assessment. The interventions described in six of these studies were effective in increasing fruit and/or vegetable intake. Targeting stratified populations and using long-lasting interventions were identified as key aspects that could influence the effectiveness of these interventions. In conclusion, evidence shows the effectiveness of mHealth application interventions to increase fruit and vegetable consumption. Further research is needed to design effective interventions and to determine their efficacy over the long term.Entities:
Keywords: fruits; healthy diet; mHealth; mobile app; self-monitoring; vegetables
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30909484 PMCID: PMC6471011 DOI: 10.3390/nu11030686
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) 2009 flow diagram for the systematic review and meta-analysis of the article selection process.
Description of the studies included in the present review.
| Reference | Study Design | Duration | Type of Intervention and Target Population | Outcome | Effectiveness | Change in Fruit Consumption | Change in Vegetable Consumption |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Randomized Controlled Pilot Study | 3 months | Self-monitored by mobile-phone application. | Primary | Fruit consumption not measured | ||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial | 2 months | Self-monitored by mobile-phone application. | Primary | Fruit consumption not measured | ||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial | 6 months | Self-monitored by mobile-phone application, text-based or audio-based health messages. | Primary | Non-significant difference | ||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial (4-arm parallel groups) | 6 months | Self-monitored by a PDA, remote coach support and financial incentives. | Secondary | |||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial | 6 months | Self-monitored, informed and supported by a mobile-phone application, weekly graphic feedback and facultative dietitian contact for further support. | Secondary | |||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial (3-arm parallel groups) | 9 months | Self-monitored by a mobile-phone application and an accelerometer, remote coaching by telephone and rewarding financial incentives. | Secondary | |||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial (3-arm parallel groups) | 6 months | Self-monitored by a mobile-phone application, dietary feedback messages and text messages via mobile-phone. | Primary | |||
| [ | Randomized Controlled Trial | 3 months | Self-monitored and trained by a mobile-phone application, text messages, e-mails, coach calls, diet booklet and access to resources. | Secondary | Non-significant difference | Intervention group: from 34.1% (baseline) to 64.3% (12 weeks) of people consuming ≥2 servings/day; | |
Effective in increasing fruit or vegetable consumption (mentioned in the table). x No effective in increasing fruit or vegetable consumption (mentioned in the table).