Weight Health Among Hispanic Women in Albuquerque: A Preliminary Study to Evaluate the De las Mías App Prototype

IF 1.2 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences Pub Date : 2021-11-01 DOI:10.1177/07399863211073022
E. Macario, M. Roberts, M. Gunter, A. V. Von Worley, Sara Naegelin, A. Matiella
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Abstract

Our 3-year study tested a culturally tailored digital platform to improve weight health among Hispanic women. Phase I evaluated a prototype (n = 54). Phase II tested the De Las Mías app (n = 195). Both included Hispanic women with BMI 25 to 39. In Phase II weight was measured at 0-, 3-, and 6-months. A telephone interview was conducted at 9-months. Primary outcome was >5% weight loss at 6 months. Experimental participants were approximately 6 times more likely to experience >5% weight loss at 6 months. Greater benefit was observed for participants age 35 to 50. Among participants age 35 to 50, 29.4% of the experimental group, compared with 12.1% in the control group, had >5% weight loss at 6 months (p-value = .08); and 46.9% of the experimental group, compared with 27.3% of control group participants (p-value = .10), had a gain in self-efficacy in making changes in physical activity. Nine of 10 participants overall maintained some healthy changes at 9 months.
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阿尔伯克基西班牙裔妇女体重健康:De las Mías应用原型的初步研究
我们为期3年的研究测试了一个文化定制的数字平台,以改善西班牙裔女性的体重健康。阶段1评估一个原型(n = 54)。第二阶段测试De Las Mías应用程序(n = 195)。研究对象都是BMI在25到39之间的西班牙裔女性。在II期,分别在0、3、6个月时测量体重。9个月时进行电话采访。主要结局是6个月时体重减轻0.5%。实验参与者在6个月后体重减轻5%的可能性大约是其他人的6倍。35岁至50岁的参与者获益更大。在35岁至50岁的参与者中,实验组中29.4%的人在6个月时体重减轻了0.5个百分点,而对照组中这一比例为12.1% (p值= 0.08);46.9%的实验组参与者在改变体育活动方面获得了自我效能感,而对照组的这一比例为27.3% (p值= 0.10)。9个月后,10名参与者中有9人总体上保持了一些健康的变化。
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来源期刊
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences
Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
期刊介绍: The Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences publishes empirical articles, multiple case study reports, critical reviews of literature, conceptual articles, reports of new instruments, and scholarly notes of theoretical or methodological interest to Hispanic populations. The multidisciplinary focus of the HJBS includes the fields of anthropology, economics, education, linguistics, political science, psychology, psychiatry, public health, and sociology.
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