| Literature DB >> 32014845 |
Seaw Jia Liew1, Alex Wilhelm Gorny1, Chuen Seng Tan1,2, Falk Müller-Riemenschneider1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile health (mHealth) approaches are growing in popularity as a means of addressing low levels of physical activity (PA).Entities:
Keywords: behavior; health; physical activity; wearables
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32014845 PMCID: PMC7055777 DOI: 10.2196/12665
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ISSN: 2291-5222 Impact factor: 4.773
Figure 1Internet and mobile health technologies to deliver team-based physical activity intervention and enhance user experience.
Definition of study phases in temporal order.
| Study phase | Definition | |
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| Validation of daily steps |
7 days of wearing physical activity wearables in free-living conditions Fitbit-measured step count data were compared with those measured using ActiGraph |
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| Validation of floor count |
4 bouts of upward stair climbing: 10 ft, 20 ft, 10 ft, and 20 ft in indoor stairwell (10 ft upward vertical displacement is equivalent to 1 floor count) Fitbit-measured floor count data were compared with visual observation |
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| Run-in (baseline) |
10 days (including weekdays and weekends) before group allocation when baseline step count and floor count measurements were established |
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| Intervention |
6 weeks of intervention (comprising 6 weekly challenges running from Monday to Friday) or 6 weeks of free living for the control group |
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| Ending |
Last 10 weekdays (Monday to Friday of week 5 and week 6) of the intervention phase |
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| Postintervention |
5 weekdays after the intervention phase |
Figure 2Participant flow diagram.
Baseline characteristics of participants in validation (n=40) and pilot trial (n=24) included in analyses.
| Baseline characteristics | Phase 1: validation study (N=40) | Phase 2: feasibility study (N=24) | |||
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| Intervention group (n=11) | Control group (n=13) | ||
| Age (years), median (25th to 75th percentile) | 24 (23-30) | 28 (23-35) | 28 (23-31) | .79 | |
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| Female | 20 (50) | 4 (36) | 11 (85) |
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| Male | 20 (50) | 7 (64) | 2 (15) |
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| Chinese | 33 (82) | 8 (73) | 12 (92) |
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| Non-Chinese | 7 (17) | 3 (27) | 1 (8) |
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| Secondaryb | 15 (36) | 4 (36) | 3 (23) |
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| Tertiary or above | 25 (62) | 7 (64) | 10 (77) |
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| Studying | 27 (67) | 6 (54) | 7 (54) |
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| Working | 13 (32) | 5 (45) | 6 (46) |
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| Not married | 37 (92) | 8 (73) | 11 (85) |
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| Married | 3 (7) | 3 (27) | 2 (15) |
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| <18.5 | 1 (2) | 0 (0) | 2 (15) |
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| 18.5-22.9 | 26 (65) | 8 (73) | 7 (54) |
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| 23.0-24.9 | 7 (17) | 1 (9) | 4 (31) |
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| ≥25.0 | 6 (15) | 2 (18) | 0 (0) |
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aIn Phase 2, feasibility study: for continuous variables, comparisons were performed by Wilcoxon rank-sum tests (medians); for categorical variables, Fisher exact tests were used.
bSecondary educational level included participants who completed A level or attended polytechnic school.
Correlation, agreement, and error in measurements of steps (ActiGraph vs Fitbit) and floors (observation vs Fitbit).
| Measurement characteristics | Daily stepsa (n=32) | Floor countb (n=40) | |
| Setting | 7 days, free-living conditions | 6 floors, research setting | |
| Number of valid data pairsc | 215 | 40 | |
| Number of valid data pairs provided by each participant, mean (SD) | 6.7 (0.58) | 4 (0) | |
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| ActiGraph or observation | 9503 (6392-12,479)d | 6 (6-6) |
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| Fitbit-measured | 11,148 (8186-14,493) | 6 (6-6) |
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| Fitbit vs ActiGraph or observation | 1398 (643-2720) | 0 (0-0) |
| Spearman correlation (ρ) | 0.89e | 0.98e | |
| Intraclass correlationf (95% CI) | 0.81 (0.45 to 0.91)e | 0.96 (0.95 to 0.97)e | |
| Median absolute percent error, median (25th-75th percentile) | 17.13 (7.80-30.29) | 0 (0-0) | |
aDaily steps were presented as the number of steps taken per day.
bOne floor count is equivalent to 10 ft upward vertical displacement (presented as the number of floor).
cValid data pairs referred to valid data points provided by both ActiGraph and Fitbit.
dActiGraph-measured steps (presented as the number of steps taken per day).
eP<.001.
fIntraclass correlation derived using 2-way mixed effects model for absolute agreement.
Figure 3Proportion of valid users (intervention, n=11; and control, n=13) over study phases.
Average stepping and stair climbing activity of completers (n=24) as well as their intervention effect (percentage change).
| Type of physical activity | Physical activity level by group, median (25th-75th percentile) | Intervention effect, (with respect to the control group) | |||
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| Intervention group (n=11) | Control group (n=13) | Percentage changea, (95% CI) | ||
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| Baseline | 10,579 (8375-11,314) | 10,207 (7745-12,345) |
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| Ending phase | 8797 (8124-13,181) | 8881 (7828-10,375) |
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| Baseline | 11.8 (8.5-21.5) | 14.8 (10.2-29.2) |
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| Ending phase | 13.6 (9.9-23.3) | 13.4 (10.3-14.4) |
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aMultiple linear regressions adjusted for its baseline physical activity, age, and gender.
Figure 4Average number of steps taken per day or number of floors (10 ft) climbed per day at baseline and across the 6-week intervention period.
Generalized estimating equation results for the average number of steps taken per day or number of floors (10 ft) climbed per day across each week during the 6-week intervention.
| Physical activity | Intervention effect (with respect to the control group) | |||||||
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| Percentage changea | 95% CI | ||||||
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| Common effect across all weeks | 9.0 | −7.3 to 28.1 | .30 | |||
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| Week 1 (steps) | −6.3 | −35.5 to 36.2 | .73 | |||
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| Week 2 (stairs) | 18.2 | −15.1 to 64.5 | .32 | |||
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| Week 3 (steps+stairs) | 24.9 | −20.4 to 95.8 | .33 | |||
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| Week 4 (step) | 15.1 | −23.5 to 73.2 | .50 | |||
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| Week 5 (stairs) | 78.5 | 20.8 to 163.8 | .004 | |||
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| Week 6 (steps+stairs) | 25.3 | −8.3 to 71.1 | .16 | |||
aGeneralized estimating equation: (family: Gaussian; link: identity) analyses adjusted for its baseline physical activity, age, and gender.
bThe interaction term (Group x week) has a P value of 0.12 and <.001 for stepping and stair climbing activities, respectively