Alsahli Mohammed, Abd-Alrazaq Alaa, Househ Mowafa, Konstantinidis Stathis, Blake Holly
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Division of Health Informatics, College of Health Science, Saudi Electronic University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
J Med Internet Res. 2022 Mar 8;24(3):e29663. doi: 10.2196/29663.
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is increasing worldwide. Physical activity (PA) is an important aspect of self-care and first line management for T2DM. SMS text messaging can be used to support self-management in people with T2DM, but the effectiveness of mobile text message-based interventions in increasing PA is still unclear.
This study aims to assess the effectiveness of mobile phone messaging on PA in people with T2DM by summarizing and pooling the findings of previous literature.
A systematic review was conducted to accomplish this objective. Search sources included 5 bibliographic databases (MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, CINAHL, Web of Science, and Embase), the search engine Google Scholar (Google Inc), and backward and forward reference list checking of the included studies and relevant reviews. A total of 2 reviewers (MA and AA) independently carried out the study selection, data extraction, risk of bias assessment, and quality of evidence evaluation. The results of the included studies were synthesized narratively and statistically, as appropriate.
We included 3.8% (6/151) of the retrieved studies. The results of individual studies were contradictory regarding the effectiveness of mobile text messaging on PA. However, a meta-analysis of the results of 5 studies showed no statistically significant effect (P=.16) of text messages on PA in comparison with no intervention. A meta-analysis of the findings of 2 studies showed a nonsignificant effect (P=.14) of text messages on glycemic control. Of the 541 studies, 2 (0.4%) found a nonsignificant effect of text messages on anthropometric measures (weight and BMI).
We could not draw a definitive conclusion regarding the effectiveness of text messaging on PA, glycemic control, weight, or BMI among patients with T2MD, given the limited number of included studies and their high risk of bias. Therefore, there is a need for more high-quality primary studies.
PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews CRD42020156465; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=156465.
2型糖尿病(T2DM)在全球的患病率正在上升。身体活动(PA)是T2DM自我护理和一线管理的重要方面。短信可用于支持T2DM患者的自我管理,但基于手机短信的干预措施在增加身体活动方面的有效性仍不明确。
本研究旨在通过总结和汇总以往文献的研究结果,评估手机短信对T2DM患者身体活动的有效性。
为实现这一目标进行了一项系统评价。检索来源包括5个文献数据库(MEDLINE、Cochrane图书馆、CINAHL、科学网和Embase)、搜索引擎谷歌学术(谷歌公司),以及对纳入研究和相关综述的参考文献进行前后向检查。共有2名评审员(MA和AA)独立进行研究选择、数据提取、偏倚风险评估和证据质量评价。纳入研究的结果在适当情况下进行叙述性和统计学综合分析。
我们纳入了检索到的研究中的3.8%(6/151)。关于手机短信对身体活动的有效性,个别研究的结果相互矛盾。然而,对5项研究结果的荟萃分析表明,与无干预相比,短信对身体活动没有统计学上的显著影响(P = 0.16)。对2项研究结果的荟萃分析表明,短信对血糖控制没有显著影响(P = 0.14)。在541项研究中,有2项(0.4%)发现短信对人体测量指标(体重和BMI)没有显著影响。
鉴于纳入研究数量有限且偏倚风险较高,我们无法就短信对T2MD患者的身体活动、血糖控制、体重或BMI的有效性得出明确结论。因此,需要更多高质量的原始研究。
PROSPERO国际前瞻性系统评价注册库CRD42020156465;https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=156465