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Do automated digital health behaviour change interventions have a positive effect on self-efficacy? A systematic review and meta-analysis

Authors :
Richard Cooke
Stefanie Williams
Katherine Brown
Joanne Parsons
Naomi Bartle
Xinru Li
Elise Dusseldorp
Grace Teah
Bradley Salisbury-Finch
Kristina Curtis
Emmie Fulton
Kayleigh Kwah
Katie Newby
Source :
HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Self-efficacy is an important determinant of health behaviour. Digital interventions are a potentially acceptable and cost-effective way of delivering programmes of health behaviour change at scale. Whether behaviour change interventions work to increase self-efficacy in this context is unknown. This systematic review and meta-analysis sought to identify whether automated digital interventions are associated with positive changes in self-efficacy amongst non-clinical populations for five major health behaviours, and which BCTs are associated with that change. A systematic literature search identified 20 studies (n = 5624) that assessed changes in self-efficacy and were included in a random-effects meta-analysis. Interventions targeted: healthy eating (k = 4), physical activity (k = 9), sexual behaviour (k = 3) and smoking (k = 4). No interventions targeting alcohol use were identified. Overall, interventions had a small, positive effect on self-efficacy . The effect of interventions on self-efficacy did not differ as a function of health behaviour type (Q-between = 7.3704, p = .061, df = 3). Inclusion of the BCT 'information about social and environmental consequences' had a small, negative effect on self-efficacy . Whilst this review indicates that digital interventions can be used to change self-efficacy, which techniques work best in this context is not clear.

Details

ISSN :
17437202
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Health psychology review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....daf542dd37489fbc847fc8147092a7bb