Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food, Monash University, Notting Hill, VIC, Australia.
UniSA Justice & Society, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Front Public Health. 2023 Sep 7;11:1228628. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1228628. eCollection 2023.
Shift workers are at a greater risk for obesity-related conditions. The impacts of working at night presents a challenge for designing effective dietary weight-loss interventions for this population group. The Shifting Weight using Intermittent Fasting in night-shift workers (SWIFt) study is a world-first, randomized controlled trial that compares three weight-loss interventions. While the trial will evaluate the effectiveness of weight-loss outcomes, this mixed-methods evaluation aims to explore for who weight-loss outcomes are achieved and what factors (intervention features, individual, social, organisational and wider environmental) contribute to this.
A convergent, mixed-methods evaluation design was chosen where quantitative and qualitative data collection occurs concurrently, analyzed separately, and converged in a final synthesis. Quantitative measures include participant engagement assessed via: dietary consult attendance, fulfillment of dietary goals, dietary energy intake, adherence to self-monitoring, and rates for participant drop-out; analyzed for frequency and proportions. Regression models will determine associations between engagement measures, participant characteristics (sex, age, ethnicity, occupation, shift type, night-shifts per week, years in night shift), intervention group, and weight change. Qualitative measures include semi-structured interviews with participants at baseline, 24-weeks, and 18-months, and fortnightly audio-diaries during the 24-week intervention. Interviews/diaries will be transcribed verbatim and analyzed using five-step thematic framework analysis in NVivo. Results from the quantitative and qualitative data will be integrated via table and narrative form to interrogate the validity of conclusions.
The SWIFt study is a world-first trial that compares the of three weight-loss interventions for night shift workers. This mixed-methods evaluation aims to further explore the effectiveness of the interventions. The evaluation will determine for who the SWIFt interventions work best for, what intervention features are important, and what external factors need to be addressed to strengthen an approach. The findings will be useful for tailoring future scalability of dietary weight-loss interventions for night-shift workers. This evaluation is based on the SWIFt trial registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry [ACTRN 12619001035112].
轮班工人肥胖相关疾病的风险更高。对于为这一人群设计有效的饮食减肥干预措施,夜间工作带来了挑战。“SWIFt 研究”是一项世界首创的随机对照试验,比较了三种减肥干预措施。虽然该试验将评估减肥效果,但这项混合方法评估旨在探讨减肥效果是如何实现的,以及哪些因素(干预特征、个人、社会、组织和更广泛的环境)促成了这一点。
采用收敛性混合方法评估设计,其中同时收集定量和定性数据,分别进行分析,并在最终综合分析中融合。定量测量包括通过以下方式评估参与者的参与度:饮食咨询出勤率、饮食目标的实现、饮食能量摄入、自我监测的依从性以及参与者的退出率;分析频率和比例。回归模型将确定参与度测量、参与者特征(性别、年龄、种族、职业、轮班类型、每周夜班次数、夜班年限)、干预组和体重变化之间的关联。定性测量包括基线、24 周和 18 个月时对参与者进行半结构式访谈,以及在 24 周干预期间每两周进行一次音频日记。访谈/日记将逐字转录,并在 NVivo 中使用五步主题框架分析进行分析。将通过表格和叙述形式整合定量和定性数据,以检验结论的有效性。
“SWIFt 研究”是一项世界首创的试验,比较了三种减肥干预措施对夜班工人的效果。这项混合方法评估旨在进一步探讨干预措施的有效性。评估将确定 SWIFt 干预措施最适合哪些人,哪些干预特征很重要,以及需要解决哪些外部因素来加强方法。研究结果将有助于为夜班工人量身定制未来饮食减肥干预措施的可扩展性。该评估基于在澳大利亚和新西兰临床试验注册中心注册的 SWIFt 试验[ACTRN 12619001035112]。