Department of Pediatrics, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, United States of America.
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, Durant, OK, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 1;13(6):e0198390. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198390. eCollection 2018.
American Indians (AI) have high prevalence of diabetes in youth and may benefit from increasing physical activity as a strategy to improve metabolic health. We tested whether financial incentives would elicit greater frequency and/or duration of exercise in AI youth at high risk for developing diabetes. Overweight/obese AI boys and girls, 11-20 years old, were instructed to exercise on 3 days/week for 48 weeks at a tribal wellness center. The program was divided into three, 16-week-long phases to test different financial incentive strategies. Within each phase participants were randomly assigned to one of two groups that received different payments for exercise. Phase 1 was designed to test whether the size of the incentive would affect exercise frequency. In Phase 1, the number of exercise sessions did not differ between the group receiving a modest fixed-value payment per exercise session and the group receiving enhanced incentives to exercise more frequently (26 ± 3 versus 28 ± 2 sessions, respectively, p = 0.568). In Phase 2, the provision of an enhanced financial incentive to increase exercise duration resulted longer sessions, as the incentivized and standard payment groups exercised 38 ± 2 versus 29 ± 1 minutes per session (p = 0.002), respectively. In Phase 3, the effect of reducing the incentives on maintenance of exercise behaviors was inconclusive due to high participant withdrawal. Aerobic fitness increased 10% during Phase 1 but was unchanged thereafter. Insulin sensitivity and body composition were unchanged during the study. In conclusion, enhanced financial incentives increased the duration of exercise sessions, but had minimal effects on exercise participation. These results indicate that financial incentives hold promise in motivating previously sedentary, overweight/obese adolescents to exercise longer, but motivating them to sustain an exercise program remains the major challenge.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01848353.
美洲印第安人(AI)的青年糖尿病患病率较高,可能受益于增加身体活动,以改善代谢健康。我们测试了财务激励措施是否会增加有糖尿病高风险的 AI 青年的运动频率和/或时间。超重/肥胖的 AI 男孩和女孩,年龄在 11-20 岁之间,被指示在部落健康中心每周运动 3 天,持续 48 周。该计划分为三个,16 周长的阶段,以测试不同的财务激励策略。在每个阶段,参与者随机分配到两组之一,每组接受不同的运动报酬。第 1 阶段旨在测试激励的大小是否会影响运动频率。在第 1 阶段,接受每节运动课适度固定价值报酬的小组与接受更频繁运动的增强激励的小组之间的运动次数没有差异(分别为 26 ± 3 次和 28 ± 2 次,p = 0.568)。在第 2 阶段,提供增强的财务激励以增加运动持续时间,从而延长运动时间,因为激励和标准支付组分别进行 38 ± 2 分钟和 29 ± 1 分钟的运动(p = 0.002)。在第 3 阶段,由于参与者大量退出,降低激励对维持运动行为的效果尚不确定。在第 1 阶段,有氧健身增加了 10%,但此后保持不变。胰岛素敏感性和身体成分在研究过程中没有变化。总之,增强的财务激励措施增加了运动时间的持续时间,但对运动参与的影响最小。这些结果表明,财务激励措施有望激励以前久坐不动、超重/肥胖的青少年进行更长时间的运动,但激励他们维持运动计划仍然是主要挑战。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01848353。