Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, California.
Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, Rhode Island.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Aug;59(2):219-227. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.03.007. Epub 2020 May 21.
Latino men experience disproportionately high rates of diseases related to low physical activity, yet they are poorly represented in physical activity intervention trials. Efforts to promote physical activity in Latina women show promising results, yet such interventions are yet to be extended to Latino men. This study tested a computer expert system‒tailored, text messaging-supported physical activity intervention for underactive Spanish-speaking Latino men compared with a control group matched for contact time. Potential predictors of intervention success were also explored.
Randomized trial. Participants were randomized to receive a Tailored Physical Activity Intervention (Intervention) or a Wellness Control (Control). Data were collected in 2015-2017 and analyzed in 2018-2019.
SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Insufficiently active Latino men (n=46).
Intervention participants received a baseline counseling session and then, individually tailored print materials and text messages on a tapered schedule for 6 months. Control participants received printed wellness materials and text messages on the same schedule.
Primary outcome was a change in weekly moderate to vigorous physical activity from baseline to 6 months measured by accelerometers. Self-reported moderate to vigorous physical activity measured by the 7-day Physical Activity Recall Interview was a secondary outcome.
For Intervention participants, median accelerometer-measured moderate to vigorous physical activity increased from 10.0 minutes/week at baseline to 57.5 minutes/week at 6 months, whereas for Control participants, it increased from 21.0 minutes/week at baseline to 23.0 minutes/week at 6 months (p<0.05). Similar results were found for self-reported moderate to vigorous physical activity. At 6 months, 47% of Intervention participants met national guidelines of 150 minutes/week versus 25% of Control participants (p=0.15, not significant).
Findings suggest that an individually tailored intervention can successfully increase moderate to vigorous physical activity in underactive Latino men. Such technology-supported interventions have the potential for broad dissemination.
This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov NCT02512419.
拉丁裔男性患与低体力活动相关的疾病的比例过高,但他们在体力活动干预试验中的代表性不足。促进拉丁裔女性体力活动的努力取得了可喜的成果,但此类干预措施尚未扩展到拉丁裔男性。本研究测试了一种针对西班牙语能力较低的拉丁裔男性的计算机专家系统定制、短信支持的体力活动干预措施,与接触时间匹配的对照组进行比较。还探讨了干预成功的潜在预测因素。
随机试验。参与者随机分配接受量身定制的体力活动干预(干预组)或健康对照组(对照组)。数据于 2015 年至 2017 年收集,并于 2018 年至 2019 年进行分析。
地点/参与者:活动量不足的拉丁裔男性(n=46)。
干预组参与者接受基线咨询,然后根据个人情况,在 6 个月的时间内收到个性化的印刷材料和短信。对照组参与者在相同的时间内收到印刷的健康材料和短信。
主要结果是通过加速度计测量的从基线到 6 个月的每周中等至剧烈体力活动的变化。7 天体力活动回忆访谈测量的自我报告中等至剧烈体力活动是次要结果。
对于干预组参与者,加速度计测量的中等至剧烈体力活动从基线时的 10.0 分钟/周增加到 6 个月时的 57.5 分钟/周,而对照组参与者从基线时的 21.0 分钟/周增加到 6 个月时的 23.0 分钟/周(p<0.05)。自我报告的中等至剧烈体力活动也有类似的结果。6 个月时,47%的干预组参与者达到每周 150 分钟的国家指南,而对照组参与者为 25%(p=0.15,无统计学意义)。
研究结果表明,个性化干预可以成功增加活动量不足的拉丁裔男性的中等至剧烈体力活动。这种基于技术的干预措施具有广泛传播的潜力。
本研究在 www.clinicaltrials.gov 注册,编号为 NCT02512419。