Compartir
Título
Short- and long-term effectiveness of a smartphone application for improving measures of adiposity: A randomised clinical trial – EVIDENT II study
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Physical activity
Body mass index
Waist circumference
Fat mass percent
mHealth
Information communication technologies
Heart healthy diet
Fecha de publicación
2018-08-01
Editor
Oxford Academic
Citación
Gomez-Marcos, M. A., Patino-Alonso, M. C., Recio-Rodriguez, J. I., Agudo-Conde, C., Romaguera-Bosch, M., Magdalena-Gonzalez, O., ... & Garcia-Ortiz, L. (2018). Short-and long-term effectiveness of a smartphone application for improving measures of adiposity: a randomised clinical trial–EVIDENT II study. European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing, 17(6), 552-562. https://doi.org/10.1177/1474515118761870
Resumen
[EN]Background: Evidence on the efficacy of smartphone applications (apps) for reducing body weight and other
measurements of adiposity sustainably is not conclusive. Objective: To evaluate the effect of adding an app for 3
months to traditional counselling on physical activity (PA) and a heart-healthy diet for the modification of measurements
of adiposity at 3 and 12 months after intervention. Methods: This randomised clinical trial included 833 subjects. The
counselling and app group (IG) had 415 subjects, while 418 were included in the counselling only group (CG). The
primary outcome was adiposity measurements at 3 and 12 months after intervention. The secondary outcome was the
effect of the intervention by sex. Intervention: Counselling on a heart-healthy diet and PA was given to both groups.
The IG also received training in the use of a smartphone app designed to promote a heart-healthy diet and PA, and this
group was given access to this application for 3 months. Outcome measurements included waist circumference (WC),
body mass index (BMI) and Clínica Universidad de Navarra – body adiposity estimator (CUN-BAE). Results: In the IG at
12 months, the following decreased: WC −0.72 cm (95% confidence interval [CI]: −2.35 to −0.02) and CUN-BAE −0.35
(95% CI: −0.63 to −0.06). These decreases were only observed in women. After baseline adjustment, the beneficial effect
was maintained in the IG compared to the CG at 12 months in terms of WC (−0.67; 95% CI: −0.29 to −0.02) and CUNBAE
(−0.57; 95% CI: −1.10 to −0.04), but only in women. Conclusions: An intervention of nutritional counselling and
PA plus the smartphone app with personalised recommendations compared to CG showed beneficial results in terms of
reduction of abdominal obesity and the percentage of body fat in women, but not in men.
URI
ISSN
1474-5151
DOI
10.1177/1474515118761870
Versión del editor
Collections
Files in this item
Nombre:
Gomez Marcos European CardioNNursing 2018.pdfEmbargado hasta: 2099-09-09
Tamaño:
510.3Kb
Formato:
Adobe PDF