Kurti Allison N, Logan Henrietta, Manini Todd, Dallery Jesse
1 Department of Psychology, University of Florida , Gainesville, Florida.
Telemed J E Health. 2015 Jan;21(1):16-23. doi: 10.1089/tmj.2014.0034. Epub 2014 Nov 7.
Rural Americans engage in less physical activity (PA) and experience higher rates of consequent health problems (i.e., obesity, cardiovascular disease) than urban Americans. Although geographic barriers have historically made this population hard to reach, rural individuals are increasingly gaining access to smartphones. Thus, the purpose of this study was to evaluate PA behavior and barriers to PA among rural residents and to gauge their receptiveness to a smartphone-based PA intervention that is currently in the development stage.
Rural Floridian adults (n=113), 18 years of age and older, completed surveys to assess PA behavior, PA barriers, and opinions about an intervention to increase PA. Specifically, they were asked to imagine a program that would require them to do PA with their mobile phones and whether they viewed intended aspects of the program as helpful. The present work is therefore formative research that sought to determine the feasibility and acceptability of a smartphone-based intervention among rural residents. RESULTS of the survey will inform the development of a tailored, smartphone-based PA intervention.
The 37.2% of participants with low PA levels (<600 metabolic equivalent [MET]-min per week) were more likely to report personal and environmental barriers to PA than the 47.8% of participants with moderate PA levels (≥600 MET-min per week). More barriers were reported among participants who self-reported as white and among participants of older age, lower education level, and lower socioeconomic status. Additionally, 75.9% of participants reported features of the intervention as at least somewhat helpful.
The growing ubiquity of smartphones among rural residents, combined with participants' positive response to the program description, supports the acceptability of a smartphone-based PA intervention for rural communities. Given the participants' receptiveness, future research should evaluate the efficacy of smartphone-delivered health behavior interventions among this population.
与美国城市居民相比,美国农村居民的身体活动(PA)较少,因此出现健康问题(如肥胖、心血管疾病)的几率更高。尽管地理障碍在历史上使得这部分人群难以接触,但农村居民越来越多地能够使用智能手机。因此,本研究的目的是评估农村居民的PA行为和PA障碍,并衡量他们对目前处于开发阶段的基于智能手机的PA干预措施的接受程度。
113名年龄在18岁及以上的佛罗里达州农村成年人完成了调查,以评估PA行为、PA障碍以及对增加PA的干预措施的看法。具体而言,他们被要求设想一个要求他们使用手机进行PA的项目,以及他们是否认为该项目的预期方面会有所帮助。因此,本研究是一项形成性研究,旨在确定基于智能手机的干预措施在农村居民中的可行性和可接受性。调查结果将为量身定制的基于智能手机的PA干预措施的开发提供参考。
与47.8%的中等PA水平(每周≥600代谢当量[MET]-分钟)参与者相比,37.2%的低PA水平(每周<600 MET-分钟)参与者更有可能报告PA的个人和环境障碍。在自我报告为白人的参与者、年龄较大、教育水平较低和社会经济地位较低的参与者中,报告的障碍更多。此外,75.9%的参与者报告该干预措施的特点至少在一定程度上有所帮助。
智能手机在农村居民中日益普及,再加上参与者对项目描述的积极反应,支持了基于智能手机的PA干预措施在农村社区的可接受性。鉴于参与者的接受程度,未来的研究应评估智能手机提供的健康行为干预措施在这部分人群中的效果。