Family and Community Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, Columbia, MO, United States.
Department of Health Psychology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Columbia, MO, United States.
JMIR Res Protoc. 2024 Sep 10;13:e63505. doi: 10.2196/63505.
Adolescent and adult obesity continues to be a public health epidemic in the United States. Despite the popularity of mHealth apps with gamification among adolescents, there are insufficient studies to evaluate the efficacy of gamified mHealth apps and financial incentives to motivate sustained health behavior change in adolescents or their adult caregivers.
This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of gamification techniques and financial incentives used in the novel "CommitFit" mHealth app to motivate health behavior change and improve various mental and physical health metrics in adolescents and their caregivers.
This study is a 3-month randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 30 adolescents (aged 13-15 years) and their adult caregivers (N=60). It evaluates "CommitFit," which uses gamification including points and leaderboards to motivate logging and achievement of self-selected health behavior goals (eg, more water, sleep, physical activity, fruits, or vegetables or fewer sugary beverages). The RCT had three arms, each with 10 dyads: (1) CommitFit-only users; (2) CommitFit$, where adolescents were paid US $0.05 for each point they earned; and (3) waitlist control. Intervention dyads used the app for 3 months and had the option to use it for the fourth month without prompts or extra financial incentives. User analytic software was used to evaluate the frequency of user logs and goal achievement. Monthly surveys evaluated self-reported change in the 5 CommitFit health behaviors. Changes in BMI and blood pressure were evaluated for all participants at 3 clinical visits. Mental health, gamification, and behavior economics surveys were completed during the clinical visits.
Recruitment began in August 2023 and was completed in 10 weeks. The research team successfully recruited and enrolled 30 dyads. Researchers emailed and called 89 caregivers on a physician-approved adolescent patient list, a 33% recruitment rate. Data collection and analysis will be conducted in the spring and summer of 2024. The results of this study are anticipated to be published between late 2024 and early 2025.
This RCT will expand knowledge of the effectiveness of gamification techniques, financial incentives, and mHealth apps to motivate sustained health behavior change among adolescents and caregivers. These results may offer new opportunities to caregivers, health insurers, health care systems, and clinicians to motivate health behavior change in adolescents and caregivers, with the ultimate goal of preventing or reducing obesity and obesity-related diseases. Additional gamification, mental health surveys, and app user analytics included in the study may provide further insight into the characteristics of adolescents or caregivers who would benefit the most from using a gamified mHealth app like CommitFit.
INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/63505.
青少年和成年肥胖在美国仍是一种公共健康流行病。尽管青少年对具有游戏化功能的移动健康应用程序很感兴趣,但仍缺乏足够的研究来评估游戏化的移动健康应用程序和经济激励措施对青少年及其成年照顾者持续健康行为改变的效果。
本研究旨在评估新型“CommitFit”移动健康应用程序中使用的游戏化技术和经济激励措施,以激励健康行为改变并改善青少年及其照顾者的各种身心健康指标。
这是一项为期 3 个月的随机对照试验(RCT),共有 30 名青少年(13-15 岁)及其成年照顾者(N=60)参与。该研究评估了“CommitFit”,它使用包括积分和排行榜在内的游戏化功能来激励记录和实现自我选择的健康行为目标(例如,多喝水、睡眠、身体活动、水果或蔬菜或减少含糖饮料)。该 RCT 有三个组,每组有 10 对:(1)仅使用“CommitFit”的用户;(2)CommitFit$,青少年每获得一个积分可获得 0.05 美元的报酬;(3)候补对照组。干预组使用该应用程序 3 个月,并可选择在第四个月继续使用,无需提示或额外的经济激励。使用用户分析软件评估用户记录和目标实现的频率。每月调查评估 5 项“CommitFit”健康行为的自我报告变化。在 3 次临床就诊时评估所有参与者的 BMI 和血压变化。在临床就诊时完成心理健康、游戏化和行为经济学调查。
招募工作于 2023 年 8 月开始,于 10 周内完成。研究团队成功招募并纳入了 30 对。研究人员按照医生批准的青少年患者名单,给 89 名照顾者发了电子邮件和打电话,招募率为 33%。数据收集和分析将于 2024 年春季和夏季进行。预计研究结果将于 2024 年底至 2025 年初公布。
本 RCT 将扩大对游戏化技术、经济激励措施和移动健康应用程序的有效性的认识,以激励青少年及其照顾者持续改变健康行为。这些结果可能为照顾者、健康保险公司、医疗保健系统和临床医生提供新的机会,以激励青少年及其照顾者改变健康行为,最终目标是预防或减少肥胖和肥胖相关疾病。研究中包含的额外游戏化、心理健康调查和应用程序用户分析可能会进一步深入了解最有可能受益于使用像“CommitFit”这样的游戏化移动健康应用程序的青少年或照顾者的特征。
国际注册报告标识符(IRRID):DERR1-10.2196/63505。