AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated a 12-week text message intervention aimed at improving health behaviors and psychological well-being in individuals with multiple cardiac risk conditions.
  • The intervention was found to be highly feasible and accepted, with 99.3% successful message delivery and a mean utility rating of 7.4/10.
  • Results showed small improvements in physical activity, optimism, anxiety, self-efficacy, and physical function compared to usual care, indicating the potential for this approach in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Objective: In a two-arm pilot trial, we examined the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of a 12-week, adaptive text message intervention (TMI) to promote health behaviors and psychological well-being in 60 individuals with multiple cardiac risk conditions (i.e., hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and/or type 2 diabetes) and suboptimal adherence to exercise or dietary guidance.

Methods: Participants were allocated to receive the TMI or enhanced usual care (eUC). The TMI included daily adaptive text messages promoting health behaviors, twice-weekly messages to set goals and monitor progress, and monthly phone check-ins. Feasibility (primary outcome) and acceptability were measured by rates of successful text message delivery and daily participant ratings of message utility (0-10 Likert scale). We also assessed impact on health behavior adherence, psychological health, and functional outcomes.

Results: The TMI was feasible (99.3% of messages successfully sent) and well-accepted (mean utility = 7.4/10 [SD 2.6]). At 12 weeks, the TMI led to small-sized greater improvements in moderate to vigorous physical activity (d = 0.37), overall physical activity (d = 0.23), optimism (d = 0.20), anxiety (d = -0.36), self-efficacy (d = 0.22), and physical function (d = 0.20), compared to eUC. It did not impact other outcomes substantially at this time point.

Conclusion: This 12-week, adaptive TMI was feasible, well-accepted, and associated with small-sized greater improvements in health behavior and psychological outcomes. Though larger studies are needed, it has the potential to be a scalable, low-intensity program that could be used in clinical practice.

Clinicaltrials: govregistration:NCT04382521.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2023.111583DOI Listing

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