| Literature DB >> 34878992 |
Yuepei Xu1,2, Ling-Zi Yue1,2, Wei Wang3, Xiao-Ju Wu1,2, Zhu-Yuan Liang1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Walking is a simple but beneficial form of physical activity (PA). Self-monitoring and providing information about social norms are the 2 most widely used "mobile health (mHealth)" strategies to promote walking behavior. However, previous studies have failed to discriminate the effect of self-monitoring from the combination of the 2 strategies, and provide practical evidence within Chinese culture. Some essential moderators, such as gender and group identity, were also overlooked.Entities:
Keywords: gender differences; group identity; mHealth; mobile health; self-monitoring; social norm
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34878992 PMCID: PMC8693203 DOI: 10.2196/29167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Figure 1Flow diagram for study 1. The diagram shows the complete experimental procedure including enrollment, randomization, and intervention. All participants (valid n=117) in 3 groups were tracked for 22 days. PA: physical activity.
Figure 2Flow diagram for study 2. The diagram shows the complete experimental procedure including enrollment, randomization, and intervention. All participants (valid n=180) in 3 groups were tracked for 31 days. PA: physical activity.
Participant demographic characteristics and baseline steps in study 1.
| Variable | Male (N=54) | Female (N=63) | ||||||
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| Self-monitoring (n=15) | PAa-consistent intervention (n=21) | PA-inconsistent intervention (n=18) | Self-monitoring (n=22) | PA-consistent intervention (n=19) | PA-inconsistent intervention (n=22) | ||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 25.87 (1.25) | 25.57 (1.03) | 25.72 (1.02) | .72 | 25.32 (0.89) | 25.42 (0.96) | 25.77 (1.02) | .27 |
| Subjective health, mean (SD) | 3.47 (0.92) | 3.38 (0.86) | 3.67 (0.69) | .55 | 3.32 (0.72) | 3.32 (0.58) | 3.05 (0.72) | .33 |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 22.54 (2.13) | 22.86 (3.58) | 20.51 (1.95) | .03 | 20.23 (2.29) | 20.76 (1.23) | 19.18 (1.83) | .03 |
| Baseline steps, mean (SD) | 8687 (3759) | 7670 (3130) | 8634 (3105) | .57 | 8356 (3717) | 7527 (3407) | 7623 (2376) | .66 |
aPA: physical activity.
Results of the piece-wise linear mixed-effects model in study 1 across all experimental stages.
| Gender and group | Intercept | Baseline | Intervention | Follow-up | Conditional | ||||
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| Slope | Change in slope | Change in slope |
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| 0.27 | |
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| Self-monitoring (n=15) | 8169.98 | 1254.20 | .03 | −1422.16 | .02 | 48.66 | .84 |
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| PAa-consistent intervention (n=21) | 7930.21 | −142.53 | .77 | 181.10 | .71 | −148.91 | .46 |
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| PA-inconsistent intervention (n=18) | 9267.26 | 166.57 | .75 | −128.39 | .82 | −213.44 | .32 |
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| 0.15 | |
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| Self-monitoring (n=22) | 8082.79 | −766.83 | .14 | 854.63 | .12 | −84.81 | .68 |
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| PA-consistent intervention (n=19) | 8181.32 | −37.13 | .95 | 152.45 | .79 | −54.04 | .81 |
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| PA-inconsistent intervention (n=22) | 8118.16 | −525.53 | .30 | 496.86 | .35 | 42.54 | .84 |
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aPA: physical activity.
Figure 3Step counts (piece-wise linear mixed-effects model predicted) of the self-monitoring and 2 social norm intervention groups in study 1 (A) and study 2 (B). Each polyline represents a participant. One highlighted polyline is used for each group and gender (male, blue line; female, red line). All (marginally) significant changes of slope and slope of the intervention are labeled. *P<.10 but >.05, **P<.05.
Results of the intervention-focused linear mixed-effects model in study 1.
| Gender and group | Intercept | Slope | SE | Conditional | |||
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| 0.31 | ||
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| Self-monitoring (n=15) | 8448.02 | −144.83 | 71.43 | .04 |
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| PAa-consistent intervention (n=21) | 8068.35 | 37.04 | 60.92 | .54 |
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| PA-inconsistent intervention (n=18) | 9520.74 | 48.70 | 65.76 | .46 |
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| 0.21 | ||
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| Self-monitoring (n=22) | 7800.66 | 81.14 | 57.49 | .16 |
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| PA-consistent intervention (n=19) | 7973.10 | 32.73 | 61.70 | .60 |
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| PA-inconsistent intervention (n=22) | 8141.32 | −122.18 | 57.44 | .03 |
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aPA: physical activity.
Participant demographic characteristics and baseline steps in study 2.
| Variable | Male (N=88) | Female (N=92) | |||||||
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| Self-monitoring (n=23) | Gender-consistent intervention (n=33) | Gender-inconsistent intervention (n=32) | Self-monitoring (n=26) | Gender-consistent intervention (n=34) | Gender-inconsistent intervention (n=32) | |||
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 22.57 (1.20) | 23.06 (1.50) | 22.88 (1.29) | .41 | 22.58 (0.95) | 22.24 (1.02) | 22.28 (0.63) | .29 | |
| Subjective health, mean (SD) | 3.30 (0.82) | 3.42 (0.61) | 3.41 (0.50) | .77 | 3.35 (0.56) | 3.29 (0.72) | 3.44 (0.56) | .65 | |
| BMI, mean (SD) | 22.40 (3.56) | 21.71 (2.52) | 21.41 (3.72) | .54 | 19.89 (2.59) | 19.42 (1.16) | 20.54 (2.52) | .14 | |
| Baseline steps, mean (SD) | 8737 (2279) | 8750 (2211) | 8012 (2647) | .39 | 7358 (1518) | 8099 (1732) | 8307 (2788) | .22 | |
Results of the piece-wise linear mixed-effects model in study 2 across all experimental stages.
| Gender and group | Intercept | Baseline | Intervention | Follow-up | Conditional | ||||
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| Slope | Change in slope | Change in slope |
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| 0.25 | |
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| Self-monitoring (n=23) | 8159.99 | 64.89 | .30 | −151.33 | .08 | 160.51 | .20 |
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| Gender-consistent intervention (n=33) | 8518.26 | −39.97 | .45 | 28.29 | .69 | −81.14 | .44 |
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| Gender-inconsistent intervention (n=32) | 7839.48 | −37.16 | .49 | 50.25 | .49 | −100.37 | .35 |
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| 0.22 | |
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| Self-monitoring (n=26) | 7303.92 | −117.33 | .04 | 164.49 | .03 | −148.91 | .19 |
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| Gender-consistent intervention (n=34) | 8014.41 | 79.70 | .11 | −143.68 | .03 | 177.38 | .07 |
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| Gender-inconsistent intervention (n=32) | 7970.47 | 10.94 | .83 | −42.36 | .54 | −19.19 | .85 |
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