Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Physical activity is known to help reduce obesity and the problems that accompany it. Walking has many benefits that make it an excellent way for obese people to increase their physical activity. It is hard, however, for people to stick with walking programs. Setting specific and challenging walking targets that are combined with timely feedback about discrepancies between desired and actual performance lead to higher performance. There is conflicting theory and evidence about the effects of publicly announcing those targets on commitment to the targets and on performance.

Our research question is whether public announcements reduce the challenge level of commitments people set, and whether the reputational consequence of public announcements is severe enough to increase performance. The investigators propose a controlled trial that will integrate Facebook with the objective monitoring of walking via the use of pedometers to test the effect of public announcements on commitments and step counts.

All participants will wear a pedometer and upload via the internet for 14 to 15 weeks, depending on their date of randomization. The first 2 to 3 weeks the investigators will determine the participant's baseline step counts. The following 12 weeks, the investigators will recommend a daily step count target based on the median number of steps the participants walked the previous week. Each week, participants will set a commitment by stating the number of days in the following week that he/she will meet the computer-set step count target.

Commitments will be entered into an interface that will link with Facebook. Participants will select who of their Facebook friends will receive their commitments and/or results via Facebook posts. The interface will distribute those posts in a way that fits in with existing online social practices.

There will be 3 experimental conditions. 1.) No public announcements 2.) Public announcement of commitment and 3.) Public announcement of commitment and results. In addition, groups 2 and 3 will provide us with emails of 3 friends or family members who will act as the participant's support team. The investigators will send announcements directly to support team members.

The investigators plan to recruit 165 participants primarily by obtaining lists of potentially eligible University of Michigan Health System patients from the clinical data repository, and sending targeted letters to these patients. Because this research - and the physical activity programs it will inform - aims to reach a large number of people efficiently, enrollment will take place online with a click-through consent document. The investigators have extensive experience with delivering online walking programs in similar populations.

The investigators hope to learn best practices for using public announcements and online social networks to encourage people to exercise more or to otherwise promote wellness.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Health Services Research


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01811407
Study type Interventional
Source University of Michigan
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date July 2013
Completion date April 2014

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT06322966 - Learning and Living With Wildfire Smoke N/A
Completed NCT04105725 - Balanced Lifestyle for Undergraduate Excellence - Mobile (Project BLUEM) N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06030739 - Nationwide Utilization of Danish Government Electronic Letter System for Increasing InFLUenza Vaccine Uptake Among Adults With Chronic Disease N/A
Completed NCT01450033 - Peers for Promoting Adolescent Transplant Health N/A
Completed NCT05542004 - Nationwide Utilization of Danish Government Electronic Letter System for Increasing InFLUenza Vaccine Uptake N/A
Recruiting NCT05966597 - Written Behavioural Persuasion Technique Intervention for Hypertension Management N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06030726 - Nationwide Utilization of Danish Government Electronic Letter System for Confirming the Effectiveness of Behavioral Nudges in Increasing InFLUenza Vaccine Uptake Among Older Adults N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05027854 - Brain Network Mechanisms Causally Underlying Human Decisions Revealed by Brain Stimulation and Functional MRI N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06138405 - Dental-Child Interaction Training N/A
Completed NCT04546217 - Gait Training Combined With Behavioral Strategies for People With Stroke N/A
Completed NCT03699722 - A Women-Focused PrEP Intervention Phase 1
Completed NCT03317054 - Prevalence of Pathologic Gambling in the Workforce: a Cross-sectional Study in Brittany, France N/A
Completed NCT01631721 - Couple & Family Contexts
Recruiting NCT05201534 - Interventions in Mathematics and Cognitive Skills N/A
Recruiting NCT05183763 - Medication Adherence Program N/A
Completed NCT05903157 - ME-WEL: eHealth Behaviour Change Intervention for Weight Management in Post-menopausal Women N/A
Completed NCT04077151 - Transgender Youth and PrEP: PK, Safety, Uptake & Adherence - Demonstration Project N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04731649 - Families Talking Together Plus: An Approach to Promote Sexual Delay and Strengthen Sexual Risk Avoidance Education N/A
Completed NCT04244617 - Peer-supported Internet Mediated Psychological Treatment N/A
Completed NCT03392350 - Randomized Trial of the Impact of Body Scanning and Intensive Behavioral Intervention on Behavioral Change and Health Outcomes N/A