Adaptive intervention design in mobile health: Intervention design and development in the Cell Phone Intervention for You trial.

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Lin, Pao-Hwa

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Intille, Stephen

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Bennett, Gary

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Bosworth, Hayden B

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Corsino, Leonor

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Voils, Corrine

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Grambow, Steven

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Lazenka, Tony

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Batch, Bryan C

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Tyson, Crystal

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Svetkey, Laura P

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England

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2015-10-09T17:22:20Z

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2015-12

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BACKGROUND/AIMS: The obesity epidemic has spread to young adults, and obesity is a significant risk factor for cardiovascular disease. The prominence and increasing functionality of mobile phones may provide an opportunity to deliver longitudinal and scalable weight management interventions in young adults. The aim of this article is to describe the design and development of the intervention tested in the Cell Phone Intervention for You study and to highlight the importance of adaptive intervention design that made it possible. The Cell Phone Intervention for You study was a National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute-sponsored, controlled, 24-month randomized clinical trial comparing two active interventions to a usual-care control group. Participants were 365 overweight or obese (body mass index≥25 kg/m2) young adults. METHODS: Both active interventions were designed based on social cognitive theory and incorporated techniques for behavioral self-management and motivational enhancement. Initial intervention development occurred during a 1-year formative phase utilizing focus groups and iterative, participatory design. During the intervention testing, adaptive intervention design, where an intervention is updated or extended throughout a trial while assuring the delivery of exactly the same intervention to each cohort, was employed. The adaptive intervention design strategy distributed technical work and allowed introduction of novel components in phases intended to help promote and sustain participant engagement. Adaptive intervention design was made possible by exploiting the mobile phone's remote data capabilities so that adoption of particular application components could be continuously monitored and components subsequently added or updated remotely. RESULTS: The cell phone intervention was delivered almost entirely via cell phone and was always-present, proactive, and interactive-providing passive and active reminders, frequent opportunities for knowledge dissemination, and multiple tools for self-tracking and receiving tailored feedback. The intervention changed over 2 years to promote and sustain engagement. The personal coaching intervention, alternatively, was primarily personal coaching with trained coaches based on a proven intervention, enhanced with a mobile application, but where all interactions with the technology were participant-initiated. CONCLUSION: The complexity and length of the technology-based randomized clinical trial created challenges in engagement and technology adaptation, which were generally discovered using novel remote monitoring technology and addressed using the adaptive intervention design. Investigators should plan to develop tools and procedures that explicitly support continuous remote monitoring of interventions to support adaptive intervention design in long-term, technology-based studies, as well as developing the interventions themselves.

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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26229119

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1740774515597222

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1740-7753

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/10740

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eng

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SAGE Publications

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Clin Trials

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10.1177/1740774515597222

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Weight loss

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adaptive clinical trial

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intervention

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lifestyle

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mobile technology

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weight maintenance

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Adolescent

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Adult

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Cell Phones

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Female

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Focus Groups

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Humans

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Male

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Obesity

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Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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Telemedicine

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Young Adult

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Adaptive intervention design in mobile health: Intervention design and development in the Cell Phone Intervention for You trial.

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Journal article

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Lin, Pao-Hwa|0000-0001-5982-9241

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Bosworth, Hayden B|0000-0001-6188-9825

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Corsino, Leonor|0000-0001-6859-9097

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Grambow, Steven|0000-0001-6037-3253

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Batch, Bryan C|0000-0002-7138-2064

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Svetkey, Laura P|0000-0002-3675-1282

pubs.author-url

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26229119

pubs.begin-page

634

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645

pubs.issue

6

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Basic Science Departments

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Biostatistics & Bioinformatics

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Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development

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Clinical Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Duke Science & Society

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Initiatives

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Institutes and Centers

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Medicine

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Medicine, Endocrinology, Metabolism, and Nutrition

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Medicine, Nephrology

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Population Health Sciences

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine

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Psychology and Neuroscience

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School of Medicine

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

pubs.publication-status

Published

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12

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