Information Technology and Lifestyle: A Systematic Evaluation of Internet and Mobile Interventions for Improving Diet, Physical Activity, Obesity, Tobacco, and Alcohol Use
Background Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication techno...
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Published in | Journal of the American Heart Association Vol. 5; no. 9 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
John Wiley and Sons Inc
01.09.2016
Wiley |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 2047-9980 2047-9980 |
DOI | 10.1161/JAHA.115.003058 |
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Abstract | Background
Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk.
Methods and Results
We systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand‐alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 s, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low‐income countries.
Conclusions
Internet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long‐term interventions to evaluate sustainability. |
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AbstractList | Background
Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk.
Methods and Results
We systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand‐alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 s, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low‐income countries.
Conclusions
Internet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long‐term interventions to evaluate sustainability. Background Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk. Methods and Results We systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand‐alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 abstracts, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low‐income countries. Conclusions Internet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long‐term interventions to evaluate sustainability. Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk. We systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand-alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 abstracts, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low-income countries. Internet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long-term interventions to evaluate sustainability. Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk.BACKGROUNDNovel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed to systematically review, synthesize, and grade scientific evidence on effectiveness of novel information and communication technology to reduce noncommunicable disease risk.We systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand-alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 abstracts, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low-income countries.METHODS AND RESULTSWe systematically searched PubMed for studies evaluating the effect of Internet, mobile phone, personal sensors, or stand-alone computer software on diet, physical activity, adiposity, tobacco, or alcohol use. We included all interventional and prospective observational studies conducted among generally healthy adults published between January 1990 and November 2013. American Heart Association criteria were used to evaluate and grade the strength of evidence. From 8654 abstracts, 224 relevant reports were identified. Internet and mobile interventions were most common. Internet interventions improved diet (N=20 studies) (Class IIa A), physical activity (N=33), adiposity (N=35), tobacco (N=22), and excess alcohol (N=47) (Class I A each). Mobile interventions improved physical activity (N=6) and adiposity (N=3) (Class I A each). Evidence limitations included relatively brief durations (generally <6 months, nearly always <1 year), heterogeneity in intervention content and intensity, and limited representation from middle/low-income countries.Internet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long-term interventions to evaluate sustainability.CONCLUSIONSInternet and mobile interventions improve important lifestyle behaviors up to 1 year. This systematic review supports the need for long-term interventions to evaluate sustainability. |
Author | Chen, Cheng‐Yu Yu, Zhi Ma, Wenjie Afshin, Ashkan Babalola, Damilola Mozaffarian, Dariush Mclean, Mireille Arabi, Mandana |
AuthorAffiliation | 1 Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation University of Washington Seattle WA 8 Institute of Clinical Medicine National Yang‐Ming University Taipei Taiwan 10 Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition New York NY 9 Cardinal Tien College of Healthcare and Management New Taipei Taiwan 4 Sackler Institute for Nutrition Science New York Academy of Sciences New York NY 2 Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy Tufts University Boston MA 7 Division of Chest Medicine Department of Internal Medicine National Yang‐Ming University Hospital Ilan Taiwan 3 Saint Joseph Hospital Chicago IL 6 Department of Epidemiology Harvard School of Public Health Boston MA 5 Division of Rheumatology, Allergy and Immunology Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 7 Division of Chest Medicine Department of Internal Medicine National Yang‐Ming University Hospital Ilan Taiwan – name: 9 Cardinal Tien College of Healthcare and Management New Taipei Taiwan – name: 2 Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy Tufts University Boston MA – name: 3 Saint Joseph Hospital Chicago IL – name: 5 Division of Rheumatology, Allergy and Immunology Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA – name: 10 Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition New York NY – name: 4 Sackler Institute for Nutrition Science New York Academy of Sciences New York NY – name: 6 Department of Epidemiology Harvard School of Public Health Boston MA – name: 1 Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation University of Washington Seattle WA – name: 8 Institute of Clinical Medicine National Yang‐Ming University Taipei Taiwan |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Ashkan surname: Afshin fullname: Afshin, Ashkan email: aafshin@uw.edu organization: Tufts University – sequence: 2 givenname: Damilola surname: Babalola fullname: Babalola, Damilola organization: Saint Joseph Hospital – sequence: 3 givenname: Mireille surname: Mclean fullname: Mclean, Mireille organization: New York Academy of Sciences – sequence: 4 givenname: Zhi surname: Yu fullname: Yu, Zhi organization: Brigham and Women's Hospital – sequence: 5 givenname: Wenjie surname: Ma fullname: Ma, Wenjie organization: Harvard School of Public Health – sequence: 6 givenname: Cheng‐Yu surname: Chen fullname: Chen, Cheng‐Yu organization: Cardinal Tien College of Healthcare and Management – sequence: 7 givenname: Mandana surname: Arabi fullname: Arabi, Mandana organization: Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition – sequence: 8 givenname: Dariush surname: Mozaffarian fullname: Mozaffarian, Dariush organization: Tufts University |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27581172$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
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Snippet | Background
Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This... Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This study aimed... Background Novel interventions are needed to improve lifestyle and prevent noncommunicable diseases, the leading cause of death and disability globally. This... |
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SubjectTerms | alcohol Alcohol Drinking - therapy diet Diet, Healthy Exercise Humans Information Technology Internet Life Style mobile Mobile Applications obesity Obesity - therapy Original Research physical activity smoking Text Messaging Therapy, Computer-Assisted Tobacco Smoking - therapy |
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Title | Information Technology and Lifestyle: A Systematic Evaluation of Internet and Mobile Interventions for Improving Diet, Physical Activity, Obesity, Tobacco, and Alcohol Use |
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