Mobile Phone and Web 2.0 Technologies for Weight Management: A Systematic Scoping Review.
TL;DR: An up-to-date, comprehensive map of the literature discussing the use of mobile phone and Web 2.0 apps for influencing behaviors related to weight management is provided to understand which technological components and features are likely to result in effective interventions.
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Abstract: Background: Widespread diffusion of mobile phone and Web 2.0 technologies make them potentially useful tools for promoting health and tackling public health issues, such as the increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity. Research in this domain is growing rapidly but, to date, no review has comprehensively and systematically documented how mobile and Web 2.0 technologies are being deployed and evaluated in relation to weight management. Objective: To provide an up-to-date, comprehensive map of the literature discussing the use of mobile phone and Web 2.0 apps for influencing behaviors related to weight management (ie, diet, physical activity [PA], weight control, etc). Methods: A systematic scoping review of the literature was conducted based on a published protocol (registered at PROSPERO: CRD42014010323). Using a comprehensive search strategy, we searched 16 multidisciplinary electronic databases for original research documents published in English between 2004 and 2014. We used duplicate study selection and data extraction. Using an inductively developed charting tool, selected articles were thematically categorized. Results: We identified 457 articles, mostly published between 2013 and 2014 in 157 different journals and 89 conference proceedings. Articles were categorized around two overarching themes, which described the use of technologies for either (1) promoting behavior change (309/457, 67.6%) or (2) measuring behavior (103/457, 22.5%). The remaining articles were overviews of apps and social media content (33/457, 7.2%) or covered a combination of these three themes (12/457, 2.6%). Within the two main overarching themes, we categorized articles as representing three phases of research development: (1) design and development, (2) feasibility studies, and (3) evaluations. Overall, articles mostly reported on evaluations of technologies for behavior change (211/457, 46.2%). Conclusions: There is an extensive body of research on mobile phone and Web 2.0 technologies for weight management. Research has reported on (1) the development, feasibility, and efficacy of persuasive mobile technologies used in interventions for behavior change (PA and diet) and (2) the design, feasibility, and accuracy of mobile phone apps for behavioral assessment. Further research has focused exclusively on analyses of the content and quality of available apps. Limited evidence exists on the use of social media for behavior change, but a segment of studies deal with content analyses of social media. Future research should analyze mobile phone and Web 2.0 technologies together by combining the evaluation of content and design aspects with usability, feasibility, and efficacy/effectiveness for behavior change, or accuracy/validity for behavior assessment, in order to understand which technological components and features are likely to result in effective interventions. [J Med Internet Res 2015;17(11):e259]
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Somayeh Faghanipour,Eftekharalsadat Hajikazemi,Soghra Nikpour,Shabnam al-Sadat Shariatpanahi,Agha Fatemeh Hosseini +4 more
TL;DR: Text messaging seems to be an effective channel of communication for weight management in Iranian overweight and obese women.
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Recognition of physical activities in overweight Hispanic youth using KNOWME Networks.
Brook Adar Emken,Ming Li,Gautam Thatte,Sangwon Lee,Murali Annavaram,Urbashi Mitra,Shrikanth S. Narayanan,Donna Spruijt-Metz +7 more
TL;DR: KnowME Networks can accurately detect a range of activities and has the ability to collect and process data in real-time, building the foundation for tailored, real- time interventions to increase PA or decrease sedentary time.
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Mary Ann Sevick,Roslyn A. Stone,Susan Zickmund,Yuanyuan Wang,Mary T. Korytkowski,Lora E. Burke +5 more
TL;DR: Modifiable and nonmodifiable factors suggested by the literature to be associated with poorer access to technology were not associated with probability of self-monitoring in this population of type 2 diabetes participants.
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Consumer views on the potential use of mobile phones for the delivery of weight-loss interventions
TL;DR: Mobile phones may provide a novel but acceptable way to deliver a weight-loss intervention that has the potential to be automatically personalised and tailored to the needs of the individual, at the same time as being delivered at a population level.
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Randomized trial of nutrition education added to internet-based information and exercise at the work place for weight loss in a racially diverse population of overweight women
Andrea Carnie,J Lin,Brittany O. Aicher,Benjamin Leon,Amber B. Courville,Nancy G. Sebring,J. De Jesus,Diane M. DellaValle,B D Fitzpatrick,Gloria Zalos,Tiffany M. Powell-Wiley,Kong Y. Chen,Richard O. Cannon +12 more
TL;DR: Additional weight loss benefit of nutrition education sessions, apparent at 3 months, was lost by 6 months and may require special emphasis on subjects who fail to achieve weight loss goals to show continued value.