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On Your Feet to Earn Your Seat: pilot RCT of a theory-based sedentary behaviour reduction intervention for older adults
by
Smith, Lee
, Fox, Kenneth R.
, Hamer, Mark
, Tyler, Nick
, White, Isabelle
, Aggio, Daniel
, Shankar, Sahana
, Begum, Saima
, Matei, Raluca
, Jefferis, Barbara J.
, Gardner, Benjamin
, Iliffe, Steve
in
Aging
/ Biomedicine
/ Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
/ Data collection
/ Exercise
/ Feasibility studies
/ Habit
/ Habits
/ Health psychology
/ Health Sciences
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Older adults
/ Older people
/ Physical activity
/ Sedentary behavior
/ Sedentary behaviour
/ Sitting
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Validity
2017
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On Your Feet to Earn Your Seat: pilot RCT of a theory-based sedentary behaviour reduction intervention for older adults
by
Smith, Lee
, Fox, Kenneth R.
, Hamer, Mark
, Tyler, Nick
, White, Isabelle
, Aggio, Daniel
, Shankar, Sahana
, Begum, Saima
, Matei, Raluca
, Jefferis, Barbara J.
, Gardner, Benjamin
, Iliffe, Steve
in
Aging
/ Biomedicine
/ Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
/ Data collection
/ Exercise
/ Feasibility studies
/ Habit
/ Habits
/ Health psychology
/ Health Sciences
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Older adults
/ Older people
/ Physical activity
/ Sedentary behavior
/ Sedentary behaviour
/ Sitting
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Validity
2017
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On Your Feet to Earn Your Seat: pilot RCT of a theory-based sedentary behaviour reduction intervention for older adults
by
Smith, Lee
, Fox, Kenneth R.
, Hamer, Mark
, Tyler, Nick
, White, Isabelle
, Aggio, Daniel
, Shankar, Sahana
, Begum, Saima
, Matei, Raluca
, Jefferis, Barbara J.
, Gardner, Benjamin
, Iliffe, Steve
in
Aging
/ Biomedicine
/ Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
/ Data collection
/ Exercise
/ Feasibility studies
/ Habit
/ Habits
/ Health psychology
/ Health Sciences
/ Intervention
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Older adults
/ Older people
/ Physical activity
/ Sedentary behavior
/ Sedentary behaviour
/ Sitting
/ Statistics for Life Sciences
/ Validity
2017
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On Your Feet to Earn Your Seat: pilot RCT of a theory-based sedentary behaviour reduction intervention for older adults
Journal Article
On Your Feet to Earn Your Seat: pilot RCT of a theory-based sedentary behaviour reduction intervention for older adults
2017
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Overview
Background
Of all age groups, older adults spend most of the time sitting and are least physically active. This sequential, mixed-methods feasibility study used a randomised controlled trial design to assess methods for trialling a habit-based intervention to displace older adults’ sedentary behaviour with light activity and explore impact on behavioural outcomes.
Methods
Eligibility criteria were age 60–74 years, retired, and ≥6 h/day leisure sitting. Data were collected across four sites in England. The intervention comprised a booklet outlining 15 ‘tips’ for disrupting sedentary habits and integrating activity habits into normally inactive settings, and eight weekly self-monitoring sheets. The control was a non-habit-based factsheet promoting activity and sedentary reduction. A computer-generated 1:1 block-randomisation schedule was used, with participants blinded to allocation. Participants self-reported sedentary behaviour (two indices), sedentary habit, physical activity (walking, moderate, vigorous activity) and activity habit, at pre-treatment baseline, 8- and 12-week follow-ups and were interviewed at 12 weeks. Primary feasibility outcomes were attrition, adverse events and intervention adherence. The secondary outcome was behavioural change.
Results
Of 104 participants consented, 103 were randomised (intervention
N
= 52, control
N
= 51). Of 98 receiving allocated treatment, 91 (93%; intervention
N
= 45; control
N
= 46) completed the trial. One related adverse event was reported in the intervention group. Mean per-tip adherence across 7 weeks was ≥50% for 9/15 tips. Qualitative data suggested acceptability of procedures, and, particularly among intervention recipients, the allocated treatment. Both groups appeared to reduce sedentary behaviour and increase their physical activity, but there were no apparent differences between groups in the extent of change.
Conclusions
Trial methods were acceptable and feasible, but the intervention conferred no apparent advantage over control, though it was not trialled among the most sedentary and inactive population for whom it was developed. Further development of the intervention may be necessary prior to a large-scale definitive trial. One possible refinement would combine elements of the intervention with an informational approach to enhance effectiveness.
Trial registration
ISRCTN47901994
(registration date: 16th January 2014; trial end date 30th April 2015)
Publisher
BioMed Central,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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