Department of Psychology, Rowan University, Glassboro, NJ 08028, USA.
Department of Family Medicine, Rowan-Virtua School of Osteopathic Medicine, Stratford, NJ 08084, USA.
Ann Behav Med. 2024 Nov 16;58(12):845-856. doi: 10.1093/abm/kaae058.
Although regular physical activity (PA) mitigates the risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) during midlife, existing PA interventions are minimally effective. Harnessing social influences in daily life shows promise: digital micro-interventions could effectively engage these influences on PA and require testing.
This feasibility study employed ecological momentary assessment with embedded micro-randomization to activate two types of social influences (i.e., comparison, support; NCT04711512).
Midlife adults (N = 30, MAge = 51, MBMI = 31.5 kg/m2, 43% racial/ethnic minority) with ≥1 CVD risk conditions completed four mobile surveys per day for 7 days while wearing PA monitors. After 3 days of observation, participants were randomized at each survey to receive 1 of 3 comparison micro-interventions (days 4-5) or 1 of 3 support micro-interventions (days 6-7). Outcomes were indicators of feasibility (e.g., completion rate), acceptability (e.g., narrative feedback), and potential micro-intervention effects (on motivation and steps within-person).
Feasibility and acceptability targets were met (e.g., 93% completion); ratings of micro-intervention helpfulness varied by intervention type and predicted PA motivation and behavior within-person (srs=0.16, 0.27). Participants liked the approach and were open to ongoing micro-intervention exposure. Within-person, PA motivation and behavior increased from baseline in response to specific micro-interventions (srs=0.23, 0.13), though responses were variable.
Experimental manipulation of social influences in daily life is feasible and acceptable to midlife adults and shows potential effects on PA motivation and behavior. Findings support larger-scale testing of this approach to inform a digital, socially focused PA intervention for midlife adults.
尽管有规律的身体活动(PA)可以降低中年人患心血管疾病(CVD)的风险,但现有的 PA 干预措施效果甚微。利用日常生活中的社会影响显示出了希望:数字微干预可以有效地利用这些影响来促进身体活动,并且需要进行测试。
这项可行性研究采用生态瞬时评估和嵌入式微随机化来激活两种类型的社会影响(即比较、支持;NCT04711512)。
有≥1 种 CVD 风险条件的中年成年人(N=30,MAge=51,MBMI=31.5kg/m2,43%为少数族裔)每天完成 4 次移动调查,共 7 天,同时佩戴 PA 监测器。在观察 3 天后,参与者在每次调查时随机接受 1 种 3 种比较微干预(第 4-5 天)或 1 种 3 种支持微干预(第 6-7 天)。结果是可行性(例如,完成率)、可接受性(例如,叙事反馈)和潜在微干预效果(对动机和个体内步数的影响)的指标。
达到了可行性和可接受性目标(例如,完成率为 93%);微干预的有用性评分因干预类型而异,并预测了个体内的 PA 动机和行为(srs=0.16,0.27)。参与者喜欢这种方法,并愿意继续接受微干预。在个体内,PA 动机和行为从基线开始响应特定的微干预而增加(srs=0.23,0.13),尽管反应是可变的。
对日常生活中社会影响的实验性操纵对中年成年人来说是可行和可接受的,并且对 PA 动机和行为有潜在影响。研究结果支持更大规模的测试,为中年成年人提供一种数字化、以社会为重点的 PA 干预措施。