AI Article Synopsis

  • Wearable mobile health (mHealth) technologies can effectively promote physical activity in communities with limited resources, particularly in predominantly African-American areas with high obesity rates.
  • A study conducted in 2014-2015 involved participants from D.C. churches who used mHealth activity monitors to log their physical activity weekly.
  • 81% of participants successfully uploaded their activity data despite generally lower household incomes, indicating that mHealth tools can be accessible and beneficial for improving physical activity in these communities.

Article Abstract

Wearable mobile health (mHealth) technologies offer approaches for targeting physical activity (PA) in resource-limited, community-based interventions. We sought to explore user characteristics of PA tracking, wearable technology among a community-based population within a health and needs assessment. In 2014-2015, we conducted the Washington, D.C., Cardiovascular Health and Needs Assessment in predominantly African-American churches among communities with higher obesity rates and lower household incomes. Participants received a mHealth PA monitor and wirelessly uploaded PA data weekly to church data collection hubs. Participants (n = 99) were 59 ± 12 years, 79% female, and 99% African-American, with a mean body mass index of 33 ± 7 kg/m. Eighty-one percent of participants uploaded PA data to the hub and were termed "PA device users." Though PA device users were more likely to report lower household incomes, no differences existed between device users and non-users for device ownership or technology fluency. Findings suggest that mHealth systems with a wearable device and data collection hub may feasibly target PA in resource-limited communities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5684058PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13142-016-0454-0DOI Listing

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