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VA RESEARCH: PEDOMETERS MOTIVATE PEOPLE
WITH
DIABETES TO WALK MORE -- The focus was on people
with
type 2 diabetes because exercise is thought to be
essential
to prevent a worsening of the condition and the
development
of complications such as nerve damage.

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Story here...
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/535486/
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-------------------------
Pedometers Motivate People with Diabetes to Walk
More
Newswise — The use of a pedometer and a Web site that tracked physical
activity levels proved to be powerful motivators for people with diabetes
who participated in a recent walking study conducted by researchers from
the University of Michigan Health System and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare
System. The study also suggests that certain types of goal-setting may be
more effective than others.
All participants in the study wore pedometers and received automated
weekly goals that were based on their previous week’s walking activity.
For half of the participants these goals were “lifestyle goals,” meaning
that any step taken during the day counted. The other half received
“structured goals,” in which only steps taken during long walks that
lasted at least 10 minutes counted. These participants had a smaller
target number of steps to take in a day than the lifestyle group.
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Study participants in both groups increased their
walking significantly during the program and there was no difference
between the groups in terms of increased walking. However, the type of
goals that participants were given in the six-week study strongly
influenced their satisfaction with the program. Those who received
lifestyle goals were more satisfied with the walking program, and wore the
pedometer more days during the study period and for more hours during each
day than those who received structured goals.
The finding sheds light on a debate among exercise experts about the ways
in which people should increase their levels of activity. Some have
contended that the only effective walking programs are those in which long
periods of activity (known as “bout steps” in this study) are counted.
Others have said that counting every step is a better motivator and is
just as effective as bout-step programs.
“Walkers in the group where every step counted experienced the same
benefit as those who just had their bout steps recorded,” says lead author
Caroline R. Richardson, M.D., assistant professor in the Department of
Family Medicine at the U-M Medical School and research scientist at the
Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development at the VA Ann
Arbor Healthcare System. The study appears in the International Journal of
Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity.
“The fact that they were also more satisfied with their program suggests
that this approach may be more successful for many people than a program
that only recognizes long periods of activity,” Richardson adds.
Study participants were 35 individuals with type 2 diabetes who were both
sedentary and overweight, and who were interested in starting a walking
program. All participants were given a pedometer that tracked walking and
had a built in USB port so that the walking data could be automatically
uploaded to the study Web site. Each participant could view his or her
step count records and new goals, along with tailored motivational
messages and tips about walking, on a personalized study home page.
The focus was on people with type 2 diabetes because exercise is thought
to be essential to prevent a worsening of the condition and the
development of complications such as nerve damage. That’s why a program
that inspires adherence is so important, Richardson notes.
Among the 30 participants who completed the study, steps taken during
longer walks lasting 10 minutes or more increased by about 1,900 to 2,700
steps a day, and the increases were roughly the same in both the lifestyle
and structured groups. Even though the lifestyle-goals group had every
step counted, they, like their counterparts in the other group, chose to
increase their walking by taking longer walks rather than by accumulating
more steps during many short walks.
In other words, a lifestyle group participant would have her steps counted
whether she went for a half-hour walk or just walked outside to get the
mail, while the structured group would only have the half-hour walk
counted. But in both groups, the increase in the daily totals came from
activities like half-hour walks, not by taking more short trips to the
mailbox, to and from the car, or visiting a co-worker down the hall.
That means that the increases in both groups stemmed from longer walks –
the type of walking that is most beneficial to one’s health. Yet the group
that had every step counted was more inclined to enjoy the overall program
and was more likely to stick with it.
Richardson’s team also is conducting further studies about the
effectiveness of pedometers as tools for motivating people to increase
their levels of physical activity. Richardson is a national leader in this
area of research.
In addition to Richardson, authors on the study were Kathleen S. Mehari,
Laura G. McIntyre, Adrienne W. Janney, M.S., and Laurie A. Fortlage, M.S.,
all of the U-M Health System’s Department of Family Medicine; Ananda Sen,
Ph.D., of the Center for Statistical Consultation and Research and the
Department of Statistics at U-M; Victor J. Strecher, Ph.D., of the Center
for Health Communications Research, Department of Health Behavior and
Health Education at the U-M School of Public Health, and of the U-M
Comprehensive Cancer Center; and senior author John D. Piette, Ph.D., of
the Division of General Medicine at U-M and the HSR&D Center for
Excellence, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
Funding was provided by the Michigan Diabetes Research and Training
Center; the Center for Health Communications Research; Richardson’s career
development award from the NHLBI and Physician Faculty Scholars Program
award from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; the U-M Student Biomedical
Research Program; the U-M Department of Family Medicine; and the VA’s
Health Services Research and Development Service.
Omron, a pedometer manufacturer, provided technical assistance and
enhanced pedometers at a research discount. None of the funding sources
played a role in the study design, data analysis or interpretation, or the
decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Reference: “A randomized trial comparing structures and lifestyle goals in
an internet-mediated walking program for people with type 2 diabetes,”
International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity, 4:59
(Nov. 16, 2007).
http://www.ijbnpa.org/content/4/1/59
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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