The Impact of a Place-Tailored Digital Health App Promoting Exercise Classes on African American Women's Physical Activity and Obesity: Simulation Study.
Tiffany M Powell-WileyMarie F MartinezKosuke TamuraSam J NeallyKelly J O'SheaKaveri CurlinYardley AlbarracinNithya P VijayakumarMatthew MorganErika Ortiz-ChaparroSarah M BartschFoster Osei BaahPatrick T WedlockLola R Ortiz-WhittinghamSheryl A ScannellKameswari A PotharajuSamuel RandallMario Solano GonzalesMolly DominoKushi RanganathDaniel HertensteinRafay SyedColleen WeatherwaxBruce Y LeePublished in: Journal of medical Internet research (2022)
Our study shows that a digital health app that helps identify recreation center classes does not result in substantive population-wide health effects at lower levels of app engagement. For the app to result in statistically significant increases in PA and reductions in obesity prevalence over 5 years, there needs to be at least 75% (125,517/167,356) of women aware of the app, 75% (94,138/125,517) of those aware of the app download it, and 75% (70,603/94,138) of those who download it opt into push notifications. Nevertheless, the app cannot fully overcome lack of access to recreation centers; therefore, public health administrators as well as parks and recreation agencies might consider incorporating this type of technology into multilevel interventions that also target the built environment and other social determinants of health.
Keyphrases
- public health
- physical activity
- african american
- healthcare
- mental health
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- weight loss
- health information
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet induced
- skeletal muscle
- pregnancy outcomes
- depressive symptoms
- climate change
- body composition
- smoking cessation
- sleep quality