| Literature DB >> 31778121 |
Dharani Yerrakalva1,2, Dhrupadh Yerrakalva3, Samantha Hajna2, Simon Griffin1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High sedentary time, low physical activity (PA), and low physical fitness place older adults at increased risk of chronic diseases, functional decline, and premature mortality. Mobile health (mHealth) apps, apps that run on mobile platforms, may help promote active living.Entities:
Keywords: aged; mHealth; mobile apps; physical activity; physical fitness; sedentary behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31778121 PMCID: PMC6908977 DOI: 10.2196/14343
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram. eHealth: electronic health; mHealth: mobile health; PA: physical activity; CCTR: Cochrane Controlled Trial Register.
Characteristics of included studies.
| First author, year | Total number of participants | Number in intervention group | Number in comparator group | Age (years), mean (SD) | Sex female, n (%) | Country | Study design | Duration of intervention (months) | Follow-up measurement (months) |
| Ashe, 2015 [ | 19 | 12 | 7 | 64 (4.6) | 19 (100) | Canada | 2-arm RCTa | 6 | 3 and 6 |
| Bickmore, 2013 [ | 263 | 132 | 131 | 71.3 (5.4) | 161 (61.2) | United States | 2-arm RCT | 2 | 2 and 12 |
| Silveira, 2013 [ | 44 | Indb 14; Socc 13 | 17 | Ind 74 (5); Soc 75 (6); Contd 76 (15) | Ind 10 (71); Soc 8 (62); Cont 10 (59) | Switzerland | 2-arm non-RCT | 3 | 3 |
| Knight, 2014 [ | 60 | SBe 14; EXf 15; CCg 16 | 15 | 63 (4) | 39 (65) | Canada | 3-arm random, no control | 3 | 3 |
| Lyons, 2017 [ | 40 | 20 | 20 | 61.5 (5.6) | 34 (85) | United States | 2-arm RCT | 3 | 3 |
| Knight, 2014 [ | 60 | SB 14; EX 15; CC 16 | 15 | 63 (4) | 39 (65) | Canada | 4-arm RCT | 3 | 3 |
aRCT: randomized controlled trial.
bInd: individual intervention group.
cSoc: social intervention group.
dCont: control group.
eSB: sedentary behavior intervention.
fEX: physical activity intervention.
gCC: combined intervention.
Intervention and comparator group characteristics.
| First author, year | Outcome (measurement) | Intervention description | App characteristics | Comparator description | Intervention frequency |
| Ashe, 2015 [ | PAa (minutes/day, Actigraph), sedentary time (% sedentary time/day, Actigraph) | Group education, individualized PA prescription, Fitbit with Fitbit app use | App syncs with wearable device. Can view daily steps, calories burned, active minutes, and sleep and track food and weight. Allows monitoring trends, goal setting and tailored daily prompts. Social networking forums | Educational sessions without PA component | 4 weekly sessions, then 5 monthly sessions |
| Bickmore, 2013 [ | PA (steps/day, pedometer) | Tablet with ECAb app and pedometer | App syncs with pedometer. Can view step counts. Has | Pedometer and self-monitoring | Instructed to have 1 conversation with ECA per day |
| Silveira, 2013 [ | Fitness (m/s, fastest gait speed) | Introductory class with iPad and active lifestyle app (either | App has strength-balance training plans, with videos to support exercises. Sends praise/reward messages if there is progress in goals (eg, has a flower that grows if session is completed). Allows monitoring trends. Bulletin board to discuss progress with experts and friends in social version. | Physical exercise manual and paper log | Patient guided |
| Knight, 2014 [ | PA (steps/day, pedometer) | Introduction and prescription of PA (exercise, sedentary, or both) then use of smartphone + app, pedometer, glucometer, blood pressure monitor | App syncs with blood pressure and blood glucose monitors. User manually inputs steps/day from pedometer. Allows monitoring trends | No comparator, all groups had apps | Patient guided |
| Lyons, 2017 [ | PA (minutes/day, activPAL); steps/day, (pedometer), sedentary time (sitting time/day, activPAL), fitness (meters, 6-min timed walk) | iPad and app/UP24 Jawbone wearable device. Initial visit then telephone counseling | Syncs with wearable device. Allows monitoring trends of step count, heart rate, sleep, food, and weight. Has a | Control, no intervention | Weekly telephone counseling |
| Knight, 2014 [ | Fitness (maximal oxygen uptake) | Introduction and prescription for a specific intensity of PA (exercise, sedentary, or both) then use of smartphone + app, pedometer, glucometer, blood pressure monitor) | App syncs with blood pressure and blood glucose monitors. User manually inputs steps/day from pedometer. Allows monitoring trends | Control, no intervention | Patient guided |
aPA: physical activity.
bECA: embodied conversational agent.
Figure 2Forest plots of pooled mean differences . MD: mean difference; SMD: standardized mean difference; VO2 max: maximal oxygen uptake.
Figure 3Risk of bias summary.