| Literature DB >> 34870611 |
Lorainne Tudor Car1,2, Dhakshenya Ardhithy Dhinagaran1, Thirunavukkarasu Sathish3,4, AiJia Soong1, Yin-Leng Theng5, James Best1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rising incidence of chronic diseases is a growing concern, especially in Singapore, which is one of the high-income countries with the highest prevalence of diabetes. Interventions that promote healthy lifestyle behavior changes have been proven to be effective in reducing the progression of prediabetes to diabetes, but their in-person delivery may not be feasible on a large scale. Novel technologies such as conversational agents are a potential alternative for delivering behavioral interventions that promote healthy lifestyle behavior changes to the public.Entities:
Keywords: acceptability; behavior change; chatbot; conversational agents; feasibility trial; healthy lifestyle behavior change; mobile phone; pilot study; preliminary efficacy; usability
Year: 2021 PMID: 34870611 PMCID: PMC8686401 DOI: 10.2196/27956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Form Res ISSN: 2561-326X
Figure 1A representation of what the interactions between Precilla and users entailed.
Figure 2Study workflow.
Overall summary of results (N=60).
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| Baseline values (n=60) | Follow-up (4 weeks) values (n=56) | |
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| Section 1 | 7 (1.37; 6-18) | 6 (0.93; 6-18) |
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| Section 2 | 28 (2.7; 12-48) | 27 (3.5; 12-48) |
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| Section 3 | 10 (4.1; 8-32) | 9 (2.2; 8-32) |
| Sleep, mean (SD) | 4 (2.36) | 4 (2.45) | |
| Stress, mean (SD) | 17 (5.13) | 16 (5.10) | |
| Physical activity (METa score), mean (SD) | 1080 (816) | 1075 (872) | |
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| 14-item score, mean (SD) | 54 (6.90) | 53 (6.46) |
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| Maximum score (%) | 77 | 75 |
aMET: metabolic equivalent of task.
bQoL: quality of life (measured using the short form version of the QoL Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire).
Figure 3The flow of participants through the study.
Characteristics of all the enrolled participants who completed baseline assessments (N=60).
| Characteristics | Baseline values | ||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 33.7 (9.3) | ||
| BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 22.3 (3.8) | ||
| Gender (male), n (%) | 23 (38) | ||
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| Chinese | 48 (80) | |
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| Malay | 5 (8) | |
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| Indian | 3 (5) | |
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| White | 2 (3) |
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| Burmese | 2 (3) |
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| Currently married | 25 (42) | |
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| Never married | 33 (55) | |
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| Separated | 1 (2) | |
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| Divorced | 1 (2) | |
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| University and above | 50 (83) | |
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| Polytechnic diploma | 1 (2) | |
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| Other diploma and professional qualification | 1 (2) | |
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| Aa-level or NTCb-1 or NTC-2 or certificate in office or business skills or its equivalent | 6 (10) | |
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| Oa or Nc-level or NTC-3 certificate or its equivalent | 1 (2) | |
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| Secondary school | 1 (2) | |
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| Employed | 37 (62) | |
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| Student (full time) | 17 (28) | |
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| Homemaker or housewife | 3 (5) | |
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| Unemployed (able to work) | 2 (3) | |
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| Retired | 1 (2) | |
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| Yes | 11 (18) | |
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| No | 49 (82) | |
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| Yes | 2 (3) | |
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| No | 58 (97) | |
aA-level or advanced-level examinations are taken by students at the age of 18, 2 or 3 years after completing their O-level or ordinary-level examinations, which are taken by students at the age of 16 after 4 years (or 5 years) of secondary school.
bNTC: National Technical Certificate.
cN-level: The Singapore-Cambridge General Certificate of Education Normal-level. Secondary students in Singapore can move between two streams based on their academic performance: 4 years of study culminating in the O-level (ordinary level) or the N-level (normal level) examinations. N-level students may participate in a fifth year of study to take the O-level examinations.
Figure 4Participants’ opinions of Precilla’s usability and acceptability.
Figure 5Percentage of total weekly interactions that were complete, incomplete, or absent (not attempted at all).
Figure 6Number of immediate and delayed interactions between participants and Precilla for each category.