Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study

BackgroundHalf of all adults in the United States do not meet the level of recommended aerobic physical activity. Physical activity interventions are now being conducted in the workplace. Accessible technology, in the form of widespread usage of cell phones and text messaging...

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Main Authors: Buchholz, Susan Weber, Ingram, Diana, Wilbur, JoEllen, Fogg, Louis, Sandi, Giselle, Moss, Angela, Ocampo, Edith V
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2016-06-01
Series:JMIR mHealth and uHealth
Online Access:http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/2/e68/
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spelling doaj-9ed4e8cf05624901bfe1e65266639bf32021-05-03T03:33:30ZengJMIR PublicationsJMIR mHealth and uHealth2291-52222016-06-0142e6810.2196/mhealth.5328Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot StudyBuchholz, Susan WeberIngram, DianaWilbur, JoEllenFogg, LouisSandi, GiselleMoss, AngelaOcampo, Edith V BackgroundHalf of all adults in the United States do not meet the level of recommended aerobic physical activity. Physical activity interventions are now being conducted in the workplace. Accessible technology, in the form of widespread usage of cell phones and text messaging, is available for promoting physical activity. ObjectiveThe purposes of this study, which was conducted in the workplace, were to determine (1) the feasibility of implementing a bilingual 12-week Text4Walking intervention and (2) the effect of the Text4Walking intervention on change in physical activity and health status in a food service employee population. MethodsBefore conducting the study reported here, the Text4Walking research team developed a database of motivational physical activity text messages in English. Because Hispanic or Latino adults compose one-quarter of all adults employed in the food service industry, the Text4Walking team translated the physical activity text messages into Spanish. This pilot study was guided by the Physical Activity Health Promotion Framework and used a 1-group 12-week pre- and posttest design with food service employees who self-reported as being sedentary. The aim of the study was to increase the number of daily steps over the baseline by 3000 steps. Three physical activity text messages were delivered weekly. In addition, participants received 3 motivational calls during the study. ResultsSPSS version 19.0 and R 3.0 were used to perform the data analysis. There were 33 employees who participated in the study (57.6% female), with a mean age of 43.7 years (SD 8.4). The study included 11 Hispanic or Latino participants, 8 of whom requested that the study be delivered in Spanish. There was a 100% retention rate in the study. At baseline, the participants walked 102 (SD 138) minutes/day (per self-report). This rate increased significantly (P=.008) to 182 (SD 219) minutes/day over the course of the study. The participants had a baseline mean of 10,416 (SD 5097) steps, which also increased significantly (P=.017) to 12,540 (SD 5149). They significantly improved their performance on their aerobic fitness test (P<.001). The participants had a baseline mean systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure of 76 mm Hg, a mean body mass index of 29.29 kg/m2, and a mean waist circumference of 36.95 inches, without significant changes seen at 12 weeks. ConclusionsWe were able to conduct a motivational physical activity text messaging intervention within the workplace setting. Both physical activity and aerobic fitness improved. However, at baseline, participants were more active than they perceived themselves to be. Although there is insufficient evidence to draw strong conclusions about the study findings, it would be useful to test this physical activity text messaging intervention in a sedentary sample within a larger workplace intervention study trial conducted over a longer time frame.http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/2/e68/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Buchholz, Susan Weber
Ingram, Diana
Wilbur, JoEllen
Fogg, Louis
Sandi, Giselle
Moss, Angela
Ocampo, Edith V
spellingShingle Buchholz, Susan Weber
Ingram, Diana
Wilbur, JoEllen
Fogg, Louis
Sandi, Giselle
Moss, Angela
Ocampo, Edith V
Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
JMIR mHealth and uHealth
author_facet Buchholz, Susan Weber
Ingram, Diana
Wilbur, JoEllen
Fogg, Louis
Sandi, Giselle
Moss, Angela
Ocampo, Edith V
author_sort Buchholz, Susan Weber
title Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
title_short Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
title_full Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
title_fullStr Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
title_full_unstemmed Bilingual Text4Walking Food Service Employee Intervention Pilot Study
title_sort bilingual text4walking food service employee intervention pilot study
publisher JMIR Publications
series JMIR mHealth and uHealth
issn 2291-5222
publishDate 2016-06-01
description BackgroundHalf of all adults in the United States do not meet the level of recommended aerobic physical activity. Physical activity interventions are now being conducted in the workplace. Accessible technology, in the form of widespread usage of cell phones and text messaging, is available for promoting physical activity. ObjectiveThe purposes of this study, which was conducted in the workplace, were to determine (1) the feasibility of implementing a bilingual 12-week Text4Walking intervention and (2) the effect of the Text4Walking intervention on change in physical activity and health status in a food service employee population. MethodsBefore conducting the study reported here, the Text4Walking research team developed a database of motivational physical activity text messages in English. Because Hispanic or Latino adults compose one-quarter of all adults employed in the food service industry, the Text4Walking team translated the physical activity text messages into Spanish. This pilot study was guided by the Physical Activity Health Promotion Framework and used a 1-group 12-week pre- and posttest design with food service employees who self-reported as being sedentary. The aim of the study was to increase the number of daily steps over the baseline by 3000 steps. Three physical activity text messages were delivered weekly. In addition, participants received 3 motivational calls during the study. ResultsSPSS version 19.0 and R 3.0 were used to perform the data analysis. There were 33 employees who participated in the study (57.6% female), with a mean age of 43.7 years (SD 8.4). The study included 11 Hispanic or Latino participants, 8 of whom requested that the study be delivered in Spanish. There was a 100% retention rate in the study. At baseline, the participants walked 102 (SD 138) minutes/day (per self-report). This rate increased significantly (P=.008) to 182 (SD 219) minutes/day over the course of the study. The participants had a baseline mean of 10,416 (SD 5097) steps, which also increased significantly (P=.017) to 12,540 (SD 5149). They significantly improved their performance on their aerobic fitness test (P<.001). The participants had a baseline mean systolic blood pressure of 120 mm Hg and diastolic blood pressure of 76 mm Hg, a mean body mass index of 29.29 kg/m2, and a mean waist circumference of 36.95 inches, without significant changes seen at 12 weeks. ConclusionsWe were able to conduct a motivational physical activity text messaging intervention within the workplace setting. Both physical activity and aerobic fitness improved. However, at baseline, participants were more active than they perceived themselves to be. Although there is insufficient evidence to draw strong conclusions about the study findings, it would be useful to test this physical activity text messaging intervention in a sedentary sample within a larger workplace intervention study trial conducted over a longer time frame.
url http://mhealth.jmir.org/2016/2/e68/
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