DeLuca Laura, Toro-Ramos Tatiana, Michaelides Andreas, Seng Elizabeth, Swencionis Charles
Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Yeshiva University, Bronx, NY, United States.
Seed Health, Venice, CA, United States.
JMIR Diabetes. 2020 Jun 4;5(2):e18363. doi: 10.2196/18363.
The prevalence of obesity and diabetes among middle-aged and older adults is on the rise, and with an increase in the world population of adults aged 60 years and older, the demand for health interventions across age groups is growing. Noom is an mHealth behavior change lifestyle intervention that provides users with tracking features for food and exercise logging and weighing-in as well as access to a virtual 1:1 behavior change coach, support group, and daily curriculum that includes diet-, exercise-, and psychology-based content. Limited research has observed the effect of age on a mobile health (mHealth) lifestyle intervention.
The goal of the research was to analyze engagement of middle-aged and older adults using a mobile lifestyle or diabetes prevention intervention.
A total of 14,767 adults (aged 35 to 85 years) received one of two curricula via an mHealth intervention in a quasi-experimental study: the Healthy Weight program (HW) by Noom (84%) or the Noom-developed Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), recognized by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The main outcome measure was weight over time, observed at baseline and weeks 16 and 52.
Linear mixed modeling found age to be a significant predictor of weight at week 16 (F=9.20; P<.001; baseline vs week 16: β=-.12, 95% CI -0.18 to -0.07), suggesting that as age increases by 1 year, weight decreased by 0.12 kg. An interaction between engagement and age was also found at week 52 (F=6.70; P=.01) such that engagement was more strongly associated with weight for younger versus older adults (age × engagement: β=.02, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.04). HW users lost 6.24 (SD 6.73) kg or 5.2% of their body weight and DPP users lost 5.66 (SD 7.16) kg or 8.1% of their body weight at week 52, meeting the CDC standards for weight loss effects on health.
Age and engagement are significant predictors of weight. Older adults lost more weight using an mHealth evidence-based lifestyle intervention compared with younger adults, despite their engagement. These preliminary findings suggest further clinical implications for adapting the program to older adults' needs.
中老年人群中肥胖和糖尿病的患病率呈上升趋势,且随着全球60岁及以上成年人口数量的增加,各年龄组对健康干预措施的需求也在不断增长。诺姆(Noom)是一种移动健康行为改变生活方式干预措施,为用户提供食物和运动记录及称重的追踪功能,以及与虚拟一对一行为改变教练、支持小组的联系,还有包含饮食、运动和心理相关内容的每日课程。仅有有限的研究观察了年龄对移动健康(mHealth)生活方式干预的影响。
本研究的目的是分析中老年成年人对移动生活方式或糖尿病预防干预措施的参与情况。
在一项准实验研究中,共有14767名成年人(年龄在35至85岁之间)通过移动健康干预接受了两种课程中的一种:诺姆的健康体重计划(HW,84%)或诺姆开发的糖尿病预防计划(DPP,该计划得到美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)认可)。主要观察指标是随时间变化的体重,在基线、第16周和第52周进行观察。
线性混合模型发现,年龄是第16周体重的显著预测因素(F = 9.20;P <.001;基线与第16周相比:β = -.12,95%置信区间为 -0.18至 -0.07),这表明年龄每增加1岁,体重下降0.12千克。在第52周还发现参与度与年龄之间存在交互作用(F = 6.70;P =.01),即与老年人相比,年轻人的参与度与体重的关联更强(年龄×参与度:β =.02,95%置信区间为0.01至0.04)。在第52周时,HW用户体重减轻了6.24(标准差6.73)千克,即体重减轻了5.2%,DPP用户体重减轻了5.66(标准差7.16)千克,即体重减轻了8.1%,达到了CDC关于体重减轻对健康影响的标准。
年龄和参与度是体重的重要预测因素。尽管参与度存在差异,但与年轻人相比,老年人通过基于移动健康证据的生活方式干预减轻了更多体重。这些初步发现为使该计划适应老年人需求提供了进一步的临床启示。