Cargando…

Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces

BACKGROUND: Lifestyle interventions delivered during the retirement transition might promote healthier ageing. We report a pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT) of a web-based platform (Living, Eating, Activity and Planning through retirement; LEAP) promoting healthy eating (based on a Mediterrane...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lara, Jose, O’Brien, Nicola, Godfrey, Alan, Heaven, Ben, Evans, Elizabeth H., Lloyd, Scott, Moffatt, Suzanne, Moynihan, Paula J., Meyer, Thomas D., Rochester, Lynn, Sniehotta, Falko F., White, Martin, Mathers, John C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4966951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27472560
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159703
_version_ 1782445460945895424
author Lara, Jose
O’Brien, Nicola
Godfrey, Alan
Heaven, Ben
Evans, Elizabeth H.
Lloyd, Scott
Moffatt, Suzanne
Moynihan, Paula J.
Meyer, Thomas D.
Rochester, Lynn
Sniehotta, Falko F.
White, Martin
Mathers, John C.
author_facet Lara, Jose
O’Brien, Nicola
Godfrey, Alan
Heaven, Ben
Evans, Elizabeth H.
Lloyd, Scott
Moffatt, Suzanne
Moynihan, Paula J.
Meyer, Thomas D.
Rochester, Lynn
Sniehotta, Falko F.
White, Martin
Mathers, John C.
author_sort Lara, Jose
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Lifestyle interventions delivered during the retirement transition might promote healthier ageing. We report a pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT) of a web-based platform (Living, Eating, Activity and Planning through retirement; LEAP) promoting healthy eating (based on a Mediterranean diet (MD)), physical activity (PA) and meaningful social roles. METHODS: A single blinded, two-arm RCT with individual allocation. Seventy-five adult regular internet users living in Northeast England, within two years of retirement, were recruited via employers and randomised in a 2:1 ratio to receive LEAP or a ‘usual care’ control. Intervention arm participants were provided with a pedometer to encourage self-monitoring of PA goals. Feasibility of the trial design and procedures was established by estimating recruitment and retention rates, and of LEAP from usage data. At baseline and 8-week follow-up, adherence to a MD derived from three 24-hour dietary recalls and seven-day PA by accelerometry were assessed. Healthy ageing outcomes (including measures of physiological function, physical capability, cognition, psychological and social wellbeing) were assessed and acceptability established by compliance with measurement protocols and completion rates. Thematically analysed, semi-structured, qualitative interviews assessed acceptability of the intervention, trial design, procedures and outcome measures. RESULTS: Seventy participants completed the trial; 48 (96%) participants in the intervention and 22 (88%) in the control arm. Participants had considerable scope for improvement in diet as assessed by MD score. LEAP was visited a median of 11 times (range 1–80) for a mean total time of 2.5 hours (range 5.5 min– 8.3 hours). ‘Moving more‘, ‘eating well’ and ‘being social’ were the most visited modules. At interview, participants reported that diet and PA modules were important and acceptable within the context of healthy ageing. Participants found both trial procedures and outcome assessments acceptable. CONCLUSIONS: The trial procedures and the LEAP intervention proved feasible and acceptable. Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of LEAP to promote healthy lifestyles warrant evaluation in a definitive RCT. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02136381
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4966951
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2016
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-49669512016-08-18 Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces Lara, Jose O’Brien, Nicola Godfrey, Alan Heaven, Ben Evans, Elizabeth H. Lloyd, Scott Moffatt, Suzanne Moynihan, Paula J. Meyer, Thomas D. Rochester, Lynn Sniehotta, Falko F. White, Martin Mathers, John C. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Lifestyle interventions delivered during the retirement transition might promote healthier ageing. We report a pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT) of a web-based platform (Living, Eating, Activity and Planning through retirement; LEAP) promoting healthy eating (based on a Mediterranean diet (MD)), physical activity (PA) and meaningful social roles. METHODS: A single blinded, two-arm RCT with individual allocation. Seventy-five adult regular internet users living in Northeast England, within two years of retirement, were recruited via employers and randomised in a 2:1 ratio to receive LEAP or a ‘usual care’ control. Intervention arm participants were provided with a pedometer to encourage self-monitoring of PA goals. Feasibility of the trial design and procedures was established by estimating recruitment and retention rates, and of LEAP from usage data. At baseline and 8-week follow-up, adherence to a MD derived from three 24-hour dietary recalls and seven-day PA by accelerometry were assessed. Healthy ageing outcomes (including measures of physiological function, physical capability, cognition, psychological and social wellbeing) were assessed and acceptability established by compliance with measurement protocols and completion rates. Thematically analysed, semi-structured, qualitative interviews assessed acceptability of the intervention, trial design, procedures and outcome measures. RESULTS: Seventy participants completed the trial; 48 (96%) participants in the intervention and 22 (88%) in the control arm. Participants had considerable scope for improvement in diet as assessed by MD score. LEAP was visited a median of 11 times (range 1–80) for a mean total time of 2.5 hours (range 5.5 min– 8.3 hours). ‘Moving more‘, ‘eating well’ and ‘being social’ were the most visited modules. At interview, participants reported that diet and PA modules were important and acceptable within the context of healthy ageing. Participants found both trial procedures and outcome assessments acceptable. CONCLUSIONS: The trial procedures and the LEAP intervention proved feasible and acceptable. Effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of LEAP to promote healthy lifestyles warrant evaluation in a definitive RCT. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02136381 Public Library of Science 2016-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4966951/ /pubmed/27472560 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159703 Text en © 2016 Lara et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lara, Jose
O’Brien, Nicola
Godfrey, Alan
Heaven, Ben
Evans, Elizabeth H.
Lloyd, Scott
Moffatt, Suzanne
Moynihan, Paula J.
Meyer, Thomas D.
Rochester, Lynn
Sniehotta, Falko F.
White, Martin
Mathers, John C.
Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title_full Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title_fullStr Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title_full_unstemmed Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title_short Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial of a Web-Based Intervention to Promote Healthy Eating, Physical Activity and Meaningful Social Connections Compared with Usual Care Control in People of Retirement Age Recruited from Workplaces
title_sort pilot randomised controlled trial of a web-based intervention to promote healthy eating, physical activity and meaningful social connections compared with usual care control in people of retirement age recruited from workplaces
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4966951/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27472560
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0159703
work_keys_str_mv AT larajose pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT obriennicola pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT godfreyalan pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT heavenben pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT evanselizabethh pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT lloydscott pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT moffattsuzanne pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT moynihanpaulaj pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT meyerthomasd pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT rochesterlynn pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT sniehottafalkof pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT whitemartin pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces
AT mathersjohnc pilotrandomisedcontrolledtrialofawebbasedinterventiontopromotehealthyeatingphysicalactivityandmeaningfulsocialconnectionscomparedwithusualcarecontrolinpeopleofretirementagerecruitedfromworkplaces