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Adaptive Goals and Reinforcement Timing to Increase Physical Activity in Adults: A Factorial Randomized Trial.

Authors :
Adams, Marc A.
Todd, Michael
Angadi, Siddhartha S.
Hurley, Jane C.
Stecher, Chad
Berardi, Vincent
Phillips, Christine B.
McEntee, Mindy L.
Hovell, Melbourne F.
Hooker, Steven P.
Source :
American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Feb2022, Vol. 62 Issue 2, pe57-e68. 12p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

<bold>Introduction: </bold>Potent lifestyle interventions to increase moderate-to-vigorous physical activity are urgently needed for population-level chronic disease prevention. This trial tested the independent and joint effects of a mobile health system automating adaptive goal setting and immediate financial reinforcement for increasing daily walking among insufficiently active adults.<bold>Study Design: </bold>Participants were randomized into a 2 (adaptive versus static goal setting) X 2 (immediate versus delayed financial incentive timing) condition factorial trial to increase walking.<bold>Settings/participants: </bold>Participants (N=512 adults) were recruited between 2016 and 2018 and were 64.5% female, aged 18-60 years, 18.8% Hispanic, 6.1% African American, and 83% White.<bold>Intervention: </bold>Principles of reinforcement and behavioral economics directed intervention design.<bold>Main Outcome Measures: </bold>Participants wore accelerometers daily (133,876 day-level observations) that remotely measured moderate-to-vigorous physical activity bout minutes of ≥3 minutes/day for 1 year. Primary outcomes were between-condition differences in (1) engaging ≥1 bout of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity on each day and (2) on days with ≥1 bout, daily total moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes.<bold>Results: </bold>Mixed-effects hurdle models tested treatment group X phase (time) interactions using an intent-to-treat approach in 2021. Engaging in any ambulatory moderate-to-vigorous physical activity was greater for Adaptive than for Static Goal groups (OR=2.34, 95% CI=2.10, 2.60 vs OR=1.66, 95% CI=1.50, 1.84; p<0.001) and for Immediate than for Static Reinforcement groups (OR=2.16 95% CI=1.94, 2.40 vs OR=1.77, 95% CI=1.59, 1.97; p<0.01). The Immediate Reinforcement group increased by 16.54 moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes/day, whereas the Delayed Reinforcement group increased by 9.91 minutes/day (p<0.001). The combined Adaptive Goals + Immediate Reinforcement group increased by 16.52 moderate-to-vigorous physical activity minutes/day, significantly more than that of either Delayed Reinforcement group.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>This study offers automated and scalable-behavior change strategies for increasing walking among adults most at-risk for chronic diseases attributed to sedentary lifestyles.<bold>Trial Registration: </bold>This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02717663). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
07493797
Volume :
62
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154560021
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2021.09.014