Use your smartphone to reduce weight gain
Lead a sedentary lifestyle? Your smartphone may be just the help you need
NEW YORK:
If you are bored of a sedentary lifestyle but do not have a guide or spouse who can help you get out of bed and hit the gym or neighbourhood park, consult your smartphone.
Being moody can help you adapt better to change
According to a pilot study, using smartphone reminders to prompt people to get moving may help reduce sedentary behaviour, increase activity and reduce chances of weight gain, higher body mass index (BMI) and obesity.
To explore this, researchers Darla E Kendzor from University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Centre and Kerem Shuval from American Cancer Society looked at if smartphone interventions have the potential to influence sedentary behaviour.
Participants wore accelerometers to measure movement and carried smartphones for seven consecutive days.
Participants who reported more than two hours of sitting during the day received a message emphasising that long uninterrupted sitting is bad for health. It encouraged them to stand up and move around more and sit less.
Over the seven-day study period, participants had significantly fewer minutes of daily sedentary time and more daily minutes of active time than controls.
Accelerometers recorded 3% less sedentary time than control participants, equaling about 25 minutes of time spent engaged in activity rather than in sedentary behaviour on any given day.
"Smartphone prompts appear to be a promising strategy for reducing sedentary behaviour and increasing activity," the authors noted.
The study, supported by the American Cancer Society, appeared in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
Are you dependent on Facebook?
Previous evidence has linked sedentary time to increased risk of breast, colorectal, ovarian and prostate cancers.
If you are bored of a sedentary lifestyle but do not have a guide or spouse who can help you get out of bed and hit the gym or neighbourhood park, consult your smartphone.
Being moody can help you adapt better to change
According to a pilot study, using smartphone reminders to prompt people to get moving may help reduce sedentary behaviour, increase activity and reduce chances of weight gain, higher body mass index (BMI) and obesity.
To explore this, researchers Darla E Kendzor from University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Centre and Kerem Shuval from American Cancer Society looked at if smartphone interventions have the potential to influence sedentary behaviour.
Participants wore accelerometers to measure movement and carried smartphones for seven consecutive days.
Participants who reported more than two hours of sitting during the day received a message emphasising that long uninterrupted sitting is bad for health. It encouraged them to stand up and move around more and sit less.
Over the seven-day study period, participants had significantly fewer minutes of daily sedentary time and more daily minutes of active time than controls.
Accelerometers recorded 3% less sedentary time than control participants, equaling about 25 minutes of time spent engaged in activity rather than in sedentary behaviour on any given day.
"Smartphone prompts appear to be a promising strategy for reducing sedentary behaviour and increasing activity," the authors noted.
The study, supported by the American Cancer Society, appeared in the Journal of Medical Internet Research.
Are you dependent on Facebook?
Previous evidence has linked sedentary time to increased risk of breast, colorectal, ovarian and prostate cancers.