Using electronic diaries to examine physical activity and other health behaviors of adults age 50+.

Audie A Atienza, Brian Oliveira, B J Fogg, Abby C King
Author Information
  1. Audie A Atienza: Health Promotion Research Branch, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, MD 20982-7335, USA. atienzaa@mail.nih.gov

Abstract

This pilot investigation used portable electronic diaries to assess the physical activity and other health behaviors of 20 adults age 50+ (mean age = 61 years). Study aims were to examine whether computerized cognitive-behavioral strategies could increase adherence to the assessments, the acceptability of electronic diaries to assess everyday health, and the relationship between computerized physical activity assessments with a standardized physical activity measure. Although approximately two thirds of participants had never used an electronic diary, results indicated that a large majority (83%) reported enjoying the use of the electronic diaries, and most (72%) reported enjoying answering all of the health questions. The cognitive-behavioral strategies employed did not enhance assessment adherence, but electronic-diary-based activity levels corresponded more strongly with the poststudy standardized activity measure than the baseline standardized measure, providing evidence of temporal convergence. Findings suggest that the use of portable electronic technology in physical activity assessment of middle-aged and older adults deserves further study.

Grants

  1. 5T32-HL07034/NHLBI NIH HHS
  2. AG-12358/NIA NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Aged
Computers, Handheld
Consumer Behavior
Cooperative Behavior
Exercise
Health Behavior
Health Surveys
Humans
Medical Records
Middle Aged
Pilot Projects
San Francisco

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0activityelectronicphysicaldiarieshealthadultsagestandardizedmeasureusedportableassessbehaviors50+examinecomputerizedcognitive-behavioralstrategiesadherenceassessmentsreportedenjoyinguseassessmentpilotinvestigation20mean=61yearsStudyaimswhetherincreaseacceptabilityeverydayrelationshipAlthoughapproximatelytwothirdsparticipantsneverdiaryresultsindicatedlargemajority83%72%answeringquestionsemployedenhanceelectronic-diary-basedlevelscorrespondedstronglypoststudybaselineprovidingevidencetemporalconvergenceFindingssuggesttechnologymiddle-agedolderdeservesstudyUsing

Similar Articles

Cited By