| Literature DB >> 31531396 |
Cother Hajat1,2, Ali Hasan2, Shaun Subel2, Adam Noach2.
Abstract
This observational study investigates whether the provision of ongoing short-term-incentives for verified physical activity increases and sustains levels of physical activity. We compared UK members at baseline (years 1 and 2) prior to Vitality's Active Rewards (VAR) intervention commencing (year 3) and follow-up (year 4) for verified, self-reported (encompassing additional physical activities), mortality relative risk and satisfaction with physical activity. Members were categorised into low-active, medium-active and high-active by tertiles of baseline physical activity. Of 11,881 participants, 6477(54.5%) were male, with mean age 39.7(SD 9.8) years. At follow-up, annual active days had increased by 56% overall [60.8(59.7-61.9)-94.8(93.0-96.5)]; 554% in low-active [8.5(8.3-8.7)-47.1(44.7-49.5)]; 205% in medium-active [39.8(39.4-40.2)-81.4(78.7-84.1)] and 17% in high-active members [131.7(129.9-133.5)-153.7(150.7-156.7)] (all p < 0.001). Annual weeks of attaining international physical activity recommendations increased by 19% overall [22.2(42.8%)-26.4(50.8%)] and by 316% for low-active members [4.9(9.5%)-15.5(29.8%)]. Self-reported active minutes/week increased by 45% overall [1423(139.4-145.2)-207.0(201.8-212.3)] and 712% in low-active members [20.1(19.3-21.0)-143.2(134.6-151.9)]. Happiness with exercise levels also increased from 1985(49.4%) to 3414(84.9%) members (all p < 0.001). The relative risk of mortality from a lack of physical activity reduced by 7% for low-active members [from 0.99 to 0.92], 5% for medium-active [0.94-0.89] and 3% for high-active [0.89-0.86](p < 0.001) and by 0.02% for each additional year of age (p = 0.02). This large-scale, real-world, short-term-incentives intervention led to a dramatic increase in physical activity which was sustained for, and still increasing after, two years. If applied at broader level, this approach could considerably aid progress towards WHO targets in its Global Action Plan for Physical Activity.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular diseases; Epidemiology; Risk factors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31531396 PMCID: PMC6746750 DOI: 10.1038/s41746-019-0164-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Digit Med ISSN: 2398-6352
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | |
|---|---|
|
| 11,881 |
| Male | 6477 (54.5%) |
| Age mean (SD) years | 39.7 (9.8) |
| Age groups | |
| <25 | 361 (3.04%) |
| 25–34.9 | 4011 (33.76%) |
| 35–44.9 | 4216 (35.49%) |
| 45–54.9 | 2383 (20.06%) |
| 55–64.9 | 742 (6.25%) |
| 65 or above | 168 (1.41%) |
| Baseline total (days with points earning events per year)a | |
| Low | 3893 (32.77%); 8.50 (5.78) |
| Medium | 3946 (33.22%); 39.84 (12.87) |
| High | 4041 (34.02%); 131.69 (57.34) |
| Overall | 11,880 (100%); 60.81 (62.74) |
| Baseline minutes per weekb | |
| Low (≤67.5 min) | 3200 (32.84%); 20.12281 (23.90) |
| Moderate (67.5–160 min) | 3218 (33.02%); 110.4809 (26.65) |
| High (160+ minutes) | 3327 (34.14%); 290.5311 (152.50) |
| Overall | 9745 (100%); 142.2799 (145.25) |
aTertiles of average verified active days in a 12-month period (years 1 and 2)
bTertiles of self-reported minutes per session multiplied by sessions per week (years 1 and 2)
Fig. 1Relative change in Active Days before and after VAR activation by baseline activity level. Note: Data were analysed using verified active days on a daily basis; significant dates include VAR Phase 1: activation of VAR Starbucks hot drinks reward, Phase 2: activation of cinema tickets; Dips in activity occur over the December holiday period. A comparison between the groups for relative change between baseline and year 4 was significant at p < 0.001
Breakdown by types of physical activity contributing to active days pre-VAR and post-VAR
| Gym | Steps | Track | Park | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | |
| Pre-VAR | 38.6 (46.3) | 19.3 (53.9) | 3.8 (18.6) | 0.3 (2.5) |
| (37.8–39.4) | (18.3–20.3) | (3.5–4.1) | (0.3–0.4) | |
| Post-VAR | 29.7 (48.4) | 59.3 (90.3) | 11.0 (32.7) | 0.5 (3.3) |
| (28.9–30.6) | (57.7–60.9) | (10.4–11.6) | (0.4–0.5) |
Data on verified active days were used, broken down by type of physical activity reported. All comparisons were significant at p < 0.001
Self-reported minutes per week of physical activity
| Low | Medium | High | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | Mean (SD) (95% CI) | |
| Pre-VAR | 20.1 (23.9) | 110.5 (26.7) | 290.5 (152.5) | 142.3 (145.3) |
| (19.3–21.0) | (109.6–111.4) | (285.3–295.7) | (139.4–145.2) | |
| Post-VAR | 143.2 (250.0) | 166.1 (200.5) | 308.0 (304.0) | 207.0 (265.9) |
| (134.6–151.9) | (159.2–173.1) | (297.6–318.3) | (201.8–212.3) |
Self-reported moderate or vigorous intensity activity data were included; all comparisons were significant at p < 0.001
Fig. 2Impact of VAR on relative risk of mortality due to lack of physical activity Verified data were used to derive the relative risk of mortality attributable to physical activity. The theoretical range of relative risk from physical activity is 0.77 to 1.26.[7–15] All comparisons were significant at p < 0.001
Verified Weeks of meeting physical activity recommendations
| Low | Medium | High | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-VAR Weeks mean(SD) | 4.9 (3.4) | 20.3 (8.3) | 40.4 (9.1) | 22.2 (16.3) |
| Post-VAR Weeks mean(SD) | 15.5 (16.8) | 23.8 (16.4) | 39.3 (14.1) | 26.4 (18.6) |
WHO recommendations of 150 min of moderate or 75 min of vigorous physical activity per week.[16] Verified data on active days were used. All comparisons were statistically significant at p < 0.001
Fig. 3Inclusion criteria