Vandelanotte Corneel, Van Itallie Anetta, Brown Wendy, Mummery W Kerry, Duncan Mitch J
Central Queensland University, Australia.
University of Queensland, Australia.
Stud Health Technol Inform. 2020 Mar 2;268:15-30. doi: 10.3233/SHTI200003.
The 10,000 Steps program originated from a landmark whole-of-community multi-strategy intervention to increase physical activity (PA) in Rockhampton, Australia in 2001-2003. It used a social ecological framework to promote physical activity at the individual, population, environmental and policy level. Two of the fundamental aspects of the original program were goal setting (10,000 steps per day) and self-monitoring (use of a pedometer for daily step counts). A project website (www.10000steps.org.au) allowed registered participants to record their physical activity. Over time the program morphed into an e- & mHealth intervention without face-to-face elements. The program is now delivered via website and smartphone apps and employs activity trackers (pedometers, Fitbit, Garmin). To date the project has signed-up over 425,000 members who have logged 221 billion steps (∼43 million a day) on the website or app. More than 14,000 workplaces and community organisations have been involved with the program. A central element of the program, the 'Workplace Challenge' has been used by ∼65% of 10,000 Steps members, which on average increases physical activity by 159 min/week for those who participate in it. In 2011, the Queensland Government designated the 10,000 Steps program as their key physical activity workplace health promotion strategy. Multiple factors underpin the success of the program. The message is simple and clear: the project name, with its distinctive logo and tagline ('Every Step Counts') provides a clear and prescriptive target for the physical activity 'dose'. Using effective behaviour change techniques: goal setting (the 10,000 Steps concept), self-monitoring (steps are tracked), social support (participants organise as 'teams' to reach certain step goals) and gamification (teams competing against each other creating 'friendly competition'). Ongoing redevelopment: since inception, there have been three complete redesigns of the website (including a branding redesign), and new smartphone apps. More recently, the website was modified to allow syncing of steps using popular activity trackers. Resources to support implementation: the program provides resources (e.g. 'Active Workplace Guide') and has dedicated staff to respond to queries from workplaces and individuals to help overcome implementation barriers. Project staff continuously promote the program via media interviews, attendance at events, social media and marketing, advertising, and networking and collaboration. Ongoing evaluation has contributed to continuous funding: to ensure the program remains successful in a fast-changing technology environment, continuous evaluation has been necessary. These evaluation strategies, the success of the original project and the strong partnership with the program funder (Queensland Health) have all contributed to the long-term (19 years) support for the project.
“万步计划”起源于2001年至2003年在澳大利亚罗克汉普顿开展的一项具有里程碑意义的全社区多策略干预活动,旨在增加身体活动(PA)。该计划运用社会生态框架,在个人、人群、环境和政策层面促进身体活动。原计划的两个基本方面是目标设定(每天一万步)和自我监测(使用计步器记录每日步数)。一个项目网站(www.10000steps.org.au)允许注册参与者记录他们的身体活动情况。随着时间的推移,该计划演变成了一种没有面对面环节的电子和移动健康干预措施。现在,该计划通过网站和智能手机应用程序提供,并采用活动追踪器(计步器、Fitbit、佳明)。到目前为止,该项目已注册了超过42.5万名会员,他们在网站或应用程序上记录了2210亿步(约每天4300万步)。超过14000个工作场所和社区组织参与了该计划。该计划的一个核心要素——“工作场所挑战”被约65%的万步计划会员采用,对于参与其中的人来说,平均每周增加身体活动时间159分钟。2011年,昆士兰州政府将万步计划指定为其主要的工作场所身体活动健康促进策略。该计划取得成功有多个因素。信息简单明了:项目名称及其独特的标志和标语(“每一步都重要”)为身体活动“剂量”提供了明确且具有指导性的目标。运用有效的行为改变技巧:目标设定(万步概念)、自我监测(追踪步数)、社会支持(参与者组成“团队”以达到特定步数目标)和游戏化(团队相互竞争形成“友好竞争”)。持续重新开发:自启动以来,网站进行了三次全面重新设计(包括品牌重塑),并推出了新的智能手机应用程序。最近,网站进行了修改,以允许使用流行的活动追踪器同步步数。支持实施的资源:该计划提供资源(如《积极工作场所指南》),并有专门的工作人员回应工作场所和个人的咨询,以帮助克服实施障碍。项目工作人员通过媒体采访、参加活动、社交媒体以及营销、广告、网络和合作等方式持续推广该计划。持续评估促成了持续的资金支持:为确保该计划在快速变化的技术环境中保持成功,持续评估是必要的。这些评估策略、原项目的成功以及与项目资助方(昆士兰健康)的紧密合作关系,都为该项目提供了长期(19年)的支持。