Effectiveness of a Web- and Mobile Phone-Based Intervention to Promote Physical Activity and Healthy Eating in Middle-Aged Males: Randomized Controlled Trial of the ManUp Study

Journal of Medical Internet Research
Q1
Jun 2014
Citations:151
Influential Citations:15
Interventional (Human) Studies
88
COI
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Male participants aged 35-54 years with internet access and a mobile phone, residing in Gladstone or Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia; low to moderate risk to increase physical activity; randomized to IT-based (website + mobile) vs print-based intervention in a 2:1 allocation for 9 months; outcomes assessed via online surveys at baseline, 3 months, and 9 months.
Results
Both IT-based and print-based interventions improved physical activity and dietary behaviors over 9 months in middle-aged males, with no significant differences between delivery modes. The IT-based approach is a feasible, scalable alternative to reach this population, though engagement with the IT platform and participant retention present challenges.
Limitations
Self-reported outcomes; limited objective measurements; substantial attrition (about half completed all assessments; IT vs print retention not significantly different); limited engagement with the IT platform and mobile features; some device/internet constraints; generalizability limited to two regional Australian cities; recruitment rate was relatively low.

Abstract

Background The high number of adult males engaging in low levels of physical activity and poor dietary practices, and the health risks posed by these behaviors, necessitate broad-reaching intervention strategies. Information technology (IT)-based (We...