| Literature DB >> 34923991 |
Chloë Williamson1, Graham Baker2, Jennifer R Tomasone3, Adrian Bauman4, Nanette Mutrie2, Ailsa Niven2, Justin Richards5,6, Adewale Oyeyemi7, Beelin Baxter8, Benjamin Rigby9, Benny Cullen10, Brendan Paddy11, Brett Smith12, Charlie Foster13, Clare Drummy14, Corneel Vandelanotte15, Emily Oliver12, Fatwa Sari Tetra Dewi16, Fran McEwen6, Frances Bain17, Guy Faulkner18, Hamish McEwen6, Hayley Mills19, Jack Brazier13, James Nobles13, Jennifer Hall20, Kaleigh Maclaren21, Karen Milton22, Kate Olscamp23, Lisseth Villalobos Campos24, Louise Bursle18, Marie Murphy25, Nick Cavill13, Nora J Johnston26, Paul McCrorie9, Rakhmat Ari Wibowo16, Rebecca Bassett-Gunter27, Rebecca Jones28, Sarah Ruane29, Trevor Shilton30, Paul Kelly2.
Abstract
Effective physical activity messaging plays an important role in the pathway towards changing physical activity behaviour at a population level. The Physical Activity Messaging Framework (PAMF) and Checklist (PAMC) are outputs from a recent modified Delphi study. This sought consensus from an international expert panel on how to aid the creation and evaluation of physical activity messages. In this paper, we (1) present an overview of the various concepts within the PAMF and PAMC, (2) discuss in detail how the PAMF and PAMC can be used to create physical activity messages, plan evaluation of messages, and aid understanding and categorisation of existing messages, and (3) highlight areas for future development and research. If adopted, we propose that the PAMF and PAMC could improve physical activity messaging practice by encouraging evidence-based and target population-focused messages with clearly stated aims and consideration of potential working pathways. They could also enhance the physical activity messaging research base by harmonising key messaging terminologies, improving quality of reporting, and aiding collation and synthesis of the evidence.Entities:
Keywords: Campaigns; Communication; Exercise; Guidance; Principles
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34923991 PMCID: PMC8684545 DOI: 10.1186/s12966-021-01230-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act ISSN: 1479-5868 Impact factor: 8.915
Fig. 1The Physical Activity Messaging Framework (PAMF)
Working Definitions of Key Concepts within the PAMF and PAMC
| Concept | Working definition | Example(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Target audience | The intended recipient(s) of the message | Older adults, individuals working from home |
| Context [ | The time of year and the geographical, epidemiological, socio-cultural, socio-economic, ethical, legal and political context at the time of messaging | During the winter; at New Year; during a global pandemic |
| Outcomes [ | Changes expected as a result of messaging | Awareness, understanding, motivation, physical activity behaviour |
| Pathway [ | The sequential process from the delivery of the message through to outcome. In other words, | Education, persuasion, encouraging habit formation, targeting beliefs about capabilities |
| Formative research/evaluation [ | Evaluation or research used to help inform message development and to assess whether the message is needed, appropriate and acceptable before it is implemented. | Focus groups or interviews with members of the target population to investigate message salience, relevant and importance |
| Co-production (Smith B, Williams O, Bone L: Co-producing research in the sport, physical activity and exercise sciences: A resource to guide co-production, forthcoming). | Bringing together citizens with those working in research, policy and industry, and/or practice in an attempt to form equitable partnerships throughout message development | Involving individuals from the target audience in message development |
| ‘What to do’ information | Information regarding the amount or type of physical activity that is recommended | 150 min of moderate physical activity per week; 10,000 steps per day; a mixture of aerobic and strength activity |
| ‘Why to do it’ information | Information regarding benefits (or consequences) of physical activity (or inactivity) | Physical health, mental health, appearance, environment |
| ‘How to do it’ information | Information providing guidance on how to be more active or signposting to opportunities for physical activity. | Guidance on when to be active, where to be active or who to be active with |
| Use of gain- or loss- framing [ | The use of framing a message to highlight either the benefits of taking part in physical activity (gain-framed) or the consequences of not taking part (loss-framed). | Gain-framed: “Walking regularly can make you happier” Loss-framed: “Not walking regularly can increase your risk of depression” |
Tailoring [ | Information based on individual data | Specific feedback on pre-established goals such as step counts |
Targeting [ | Information designed to be relevant to a specific group | Information relevant to inactive individuals or people with Diabetes |
| Personalisation [ | The use of static, individual-specific information in a message | Messages involving name or home address |
| Language and choice of words | The dialect(s) and selection of specific wording used in the message | English, Spanish, use of slang, use of lay-audience friendly language |
| Message tone | The tone adopted by the message | Threatening, persuasive, encouraging |
| Text (message format) | The use of words to convey information in a message | Text on posters or social media posts |
| Images or video (message format) | The use of images and videos to convey information in a message. | Images or footage of individuals being active |
| Audio (message format) | The use of audio to convey information in a message. | Music, voiceovers, sound effects |
| Media, mode or channel of delivery | The type of media through which the message is being communicated | Emails, posters, social media posts, radio/television adverts |
| Message volume or length | The volume or the length of the message relating to the number of words in a message or the amount of time it takes to listen to a message. | 100 words, 20 s audio/video clip |
| Provider or source | The provider or source of the message | Doctor, journalist, reporter, friends/family |
| Setting | The setting in which the message will be received by the intended recipient | Doctor’s waiting room, home, work, school |
| Frequency, time of day and duration | How often the message is delivered, at what time, and for how long. Together these contribute to the overall dose of message delivered. | Emails sent in the morning 3 times a week for 4 weeks |
Table adapted (with permission) from Williamson et al. [9]. Where cited, definitions adapted from source to align specifically with PA messaging
Examples of different information types in physical activity messages
| Information type | Examples |
|---|---|
| What to do | “Adults should aim to accumulate 150 min of moderate- to vigorous- physical activity a week” “Aim for 10,000 steps a day or more” “Aim to take part in both aerobic and strength exercises” |
| Why to do it | “Being physically active can reduce your risk of heart disease later in life” “Take the stairs – feel less stressed” “Cycle for a healthier planet” “A little movement for a little mood improvement” |
| How to do it | “Try walking during your lunch break to become more active!” “Set weekly goals and smash them!” “Did you know that we run a group walk for University staff every Thursday at 12 pm? It starts outside the library. Why not come along next week?” |
Fig. 2Illustrative examples of combinations of tailored, targeted, and personalised messages
Types of evaluation
| Evaluation type | Working definitions (adapted from Bauman & Nutbeam, 2014) [ |
|---|---|
| Formative evaluation of physical activity messaging | Gathering data to help inform message development and to assess whether the message is needed, appropriate and acceptable before it is implemented. (e.g., using focus groups to test alternate messages, and establish messaging preferences). |
| Process evaluation of physical activity messages | Establishing whether or not the message was delivered as intended (e.g., what was the message reach? Was the message delivered successfully to the intended target audience, at the correct time, in the desired setting?) |
| Impact/Outcome evaluation of physical activity messages | Establishing whether or not the message produced changes in the desired indicators (e.g., did the message bring about changes in awareness, attitudes, or physical activity behaviour?) |