Chen Jyu-Lin, Guedes Claudia M, Cooper Bruce A, Lung Audrey E
School of Nursing, Department of Family Health Care Nursing, University of California San Francico, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Department of Kinesiology, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Interact J Med Res. 2017 Aug 2;6(2):e12. doi: 10.2196/ijmr.7860.
In the United States, approximately one-third of adolescents are now overweight or obese, and one in six is obese. This financial cost and the larger nonfinancial costs of obesity make obesity prevention and management for adolescents imperative for the health of the nation. However, primary care visits are typically brief, and primary care providers may lack adequate resources to help overweight or obese adolescents to manage weight issues. To augment the efficacy of primary care visits for adolescent weight management, mobile phone technology can be used as an adjunct treatment that provides additional opportunities for encouraging improvement in lifestyle, attainment, and maintenance of healthy weight.
The purposes of this study were to (1) measure effects of an innovative mobile phone technology-based intervention for overweight and obese adolescents and to (2) examine the intervention's feasibility for use in primary care clinics.
The mobile phone-based intervention had three components: use of the Fitbit Flex, participation in an online educational program, and receipt of biweekly text messages during the maintenance phase. A randomized controlled study design was utilized. Data regarding anthropometrics (body mass index [BMI] and waist-to-hip ratio), blood pressure, levels of physical and sedentary activity, diet, and self-efficacy regarding physical activity and diet were collected at baseline and at 3 and 6 months after the baseline assessment.
A total of 40 adolescents participated in the study. At the 6-month follow-up visit, compared to participants in the control group, the mobile phone-based intervention participants had significant improvement in BMI (z=-4.37, P=.001), diastolic blood pressure (z=-3.23, P=.001), physical activity days per week (z=2.58, P=.01), TV and computer time (z=-3.34, P=.001), servings of fruits and vegetables per day (z=2.74, P=.006), servings of soda and sweetened drinks (z=-3.19, P=.001), physical activity self-efficacy (z=2.75, P=.006), and dietary self-efficacy (z=5.05, P=.001). Medium to large effect sizes were found in these outcome variables.
The use of mobile technologies may offer a practical, reliable adjunct to weight management for overweight and obese adolescents in busy primary care clinics serving adolescents.
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT 01693250; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01693250? term=Adolescent+ obesity+AND+mhealth&rank=5 (Archived by WebCite at ).
在美国,目前约三分之一的青少年超重或肥胖,六分之一的青少年肥胖。肥胖带来的经济成本以及更大的非经济成本使得青少年肥胖的预防和管理对国家健康至关重要。然而,初级保健就诊时间通常较短,初级保健提供者可能缺乏足够资源来帮助超重或肥胖青少年管理体重问题。为提高初级保健就诊对青少年体重管理的效果,可将手机技术用作辅助治疗手段,为鼓励改善生活方式、实现并维持健康体重提供更多机会。
本研究旨在(1)测量基于创新手机技术的干预措施对超重和肥胖青少年的影响,以及(2)检验该干预措施在初级保健诊所使用的可行性。
基于手机的干预措施包括三个部分:使用Fitbit Flex手环、参与在线教育项目以及在维持阶段每两周接收一次短信。采用随机对照研究设计。在基线以及基线评估后3个月和6个月收集人体测量学数据(体重指数[BMI]和腰臀比)、血压、身体活动和久坐活动水平、饮食以及身体活动和饮食方面的自我效能感数据。
共有40名青少年参与了该研究。在6个月的随访就诊时,与对照组参与者相比,基于手机的干预组参与者在BMI(z=-4.37,P=.001)、舒张压(z=-3.23,P=.001)、每周身体活动天数(z=2.58,P=.01)、看电视和使用电脑时间(z=-3.34,P=.001)、每天水果和蔬菜摄入量(z=2.74,P=.006)、汽水和含糖饮料摄入量(z=-3.19,P=.001)、身体活动自我效能感(z=2.75,P=.006)以及饮食自我效能感(z=5.05,P=.001)方面有显著改善。在这些结果变量中发现了中等到较大的效应量。
对于在为青少年服务的繁忙初级保健诊所中,使用移动技术可能为超重和肥胖青少年的体重管理提供一种实用、可靠的辅助手段。
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT 01693250;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01693250? term=Adolescent+ obesity+AND+mhealth&rank=5(由WebCite存档于 )