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Rise and Recharge: Effects on Activity Outcomes of an e-Health Smartphone Intervention to Reduce Office Workers’ Sitting Time

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posted on 2021-06-24, 11:07 authored by Abigail Morris, Kelly Mackintosh, David Dunstan, Neville Owen, Paddy Dempsey, Thomas Pennington, Melitta McNarry
This feasibility study evaluated the effects of an individual-level intervention to target office workers total and prolonged sedentary behaviour during working hours, using an e-health smartphone application. A three-arm (Prompt-30 or 60 min Intervention arm and a No-Prompt Comparison arm), quasi-randomised intervention was conducted over 12 weeks. Behavioural outcomes (worktime sitting, standing, stepping, prolonged sitting, and physical activity) were monitored using accelerometers and anthropometrics measured at baseline, 6 weeks and 12 weeks. Cardiometabolic measures were taken at baseline and 12 weeks. Fifty-six office workers (64% female) completed baseline assessments. The Prompt-60 arm was associated with a reduction in occupational sitting time at 6 (−46.8 min/8 h workday [95% confidence interval = −86.4, −6.6], p < 0.05) and 12 weeks (−69.6 min/8 h workday [−111.0, −28.2], p < 0.05) relative to the No-Prompt Comparison arm. Sitting was primarily replaced with standing in both arms (p > 0.05). Both Intervention arms reduced time in prolonged sitting bouts at 12 weeks (Prompt-30: −27.0 [−99.0, 45.0]; Prompt-60: −25.8 [−98.4, 47.4] min/8 h workday; both p > 0.05). There were no changes in steps or cardiometabolic risk. Findings highlight the potential of a smartphone e-health application, suggesting 60 min prompts may present an optimal frequency to reduce total occupational sedentary behaviour.

Funding

This research was funded by the GetAMoveOn Network+ through EPSRC, grant number EP/N027299/1

History

Citation

Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 9300

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

Volume

17

Issue

24

Publisher

MDPI

issn

1660-4601

Acceptance date

2020-12-10

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-06-24

Language

English

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