TY - JOUR
T1 - Acceptability and feasibility of an online physical activity program for women over 50
T2 - a pilot trial
AU - Wallbank, Geraldine
AU - Sherrington, Catherine
AU - Hassett, Leanne
AU - Kwasnicka, Dominika
AU - Chau, Josephine Y.
AU - Phongsavan, Philayrath
AU - Grunseit, Anne
AU - Martin, Fiona
AU - Canning, Colleen G.
AU - Baird, Marian
AU - Shepherd, Roberta
AU - Tiedemann, Anne
PY - 2022/2/16
Y1 - 2022/2/16
N2 - Regular physical activity benefits health across the lifespan. Women in middle-age often juggle carer and work responsibilities, are often inactive, and may benefit from tailored support to increase physical activity. Establish the acceptability, feasibility, and impact on physical activity of a scalable program for women 50+ years. This pilot trial randomized participants to immediate program access, or to a wait-list control. [Active Women over 50 Online] program included: (1) study-specific website, (2) 8 emails or 24 SMS motivation-based messages, (3) one telephone health-coaching session. Outcomes, at 3 months, were acceptability (recommend study participation, intervention uptake), feasibility (recruitment, reach, completion), intervention impact (physical activity), intervention impressions. At baseline, 62 participants of mean (SD) age 59 (+/- 7) years took 7459 (+/- 2424) steps/day and most (92%) reported >= 2 medical conditions. At 3 months, acceptability and impact data were available for 52 (84%) and 57 (92%) participants, respectively. Study participation was recommended by 83% of participants. Participants mostly agreed to receive health coaching (81%) and messages (87%: email = 56%, SMS = 44%), opened 82% of emails and accessed the website 4.8 times on average. Respondents reported the intervention supported their physical activity. Intervention participants were more likely to increase steps from baseline by 2000+/day (OR: 6.31, 95% CI: 1.22 to 32.70, p = .028) than controls, and trended toward more light-intensity (p = .075) and moderate-vigorous intensity physical activity (p = .11). The [Active Women over 50 Online] program demonstrated acceptability and feasibility among the target population, and effectiveness in some domains in the short term. Results warrant further testing in a full-scale RCT.
AB - Regular physical activity benefits health across the lifespan. Women in middle-age often juggle carer and work responsibilities, are often inactive, and may benefit from tailored support to increase physical activity. Establish the acceptability, feasibility, and impact on physical activity of a scalable program for women 50+ years. This pilot trial randomized participants to immediate program access, or to a wait-list control. [Active Women over 50 Online] program included: (1) study-specific website, (2) 8 emails or 24 SMS motivation-based messages, (3) one telephone health-coaching session. Outcomes, at 3 months, were acceptability (recommend study participation, intervention uptake), feasibility (recruitment, reach, completion), intervention impact (physical activity), intervention impressions. At baseline, 62 participants of mean (SD) age 59 (+/- 7) years took 7459 (+/- 2424) steps/day and most (92%) reported >= 2 medical conditions. At 3 months, acceptability and impact data were available for 52 (84%) and 57 (92%) participants, respectively. Study participation was recommended by 83% of participants. Participants mostly agreed to receive health coaching (81%) and messages (87%: email = 56%, SMS = 44%), opened 82% of emails and accessed the website 4.8 times on average. Respondents reported the intervention supported their physical activity. Intervention participants were more likely to increase steps from baseline by 2000+/day (OR: 6.31, 95% CI: 1.22 to 32.70, p = .028) than controls, and trended toward more light-intensity (p = .075) and moderate-vigorous intensity physical activity (p = .11). The [Active Women over 50 Online] program demonstrated acceptability and feasibility among the target population, and effectiveness in some domains in the short term. Results warrant further testing in a full-scale RCT.
KW - Physical activity
KW - Digital intervention
KW - Health coaching
KW - Health promotion
KW - Middle-age women
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124792996&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/tbm/ibab161
DO - 10.1093/tbm/ibab161
M3 - Article
C2 - 35020938
SN - 1869-6716
VL - 12
SP - 225
EP - 236
JO - Translational Behavioral Medicine
JF - Translational Behavioral Medicine
IS - 2
ER -