Effectiveness of a Smartphone App to Promote Healthy Weight Gain, Diet, and Physical Activity During Pregnancy (HealthyMoms): Randomized Controlled Trial
gestational weight gain; physical activity; diet; pregnancy; mHealth; smartphone app; mobile phone app; telemedicine; randomized controlled trial
LIFE-STYLE INTERVENTIONS
physical activity
Gestational weight gain
Information technology
MHealth
MASS
Weight Gain
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Pregnancy
Gynaecology, Obstetrics and Reproductive Medicine
Humans
Maternal Health Services
Gynekologi, obstetrik och reproduktionsmedicin
mobile phone app
Child
Exercise
RISK
Sweden
2. Zero hunger
Original Paper
OVERWEIGHT
Physical activity
WOMEN
Bayes Theorem
Smartphone app
T58.5-58.64
Mobile Applications
Telemedicine
Diet
3. Good health
smartphone app
Mobile phone app
mHealth
Randomized controlled trial
gestational weight gain
randomized controlled trial
Female
telemedicine
pregnancy
Smartphone
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
diet
Health care science
DOI:
10.2196/26091
Publication Date:
2021-03-11T15:31:15Z
AUTHORS (10)
ABSTRACT
Background
Excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) during pregnancy is a major public health concern associated with negative health outcomes for both mother and child. Scalable interventions are needed, and digital interventions have the potential to reach many women and promote healthy GWG. Most previous studies of digital interventions have been small pilot studies or have not included women from all BMI categories. We therefore examined the effectiveness of a smartphone app in a large sample (n=305) covering all BMI categories.
Objective
To investigate the effectiveness of a 6-month intervention (the HealthyMoms app) on GWG, body fatness, dietary habits, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), glycemia, and insulin resistance in comparison to standard maternity care.
Methods
A 2-arm parallel randomized controlled trial was conducted. Women in early pregnancy at maternity clinics in Östergötland, Sweden, were recruited. Eligible women who provided written informed consent completed baseline measures, before being randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either an intervention (n=152) or control group (n=153). The control group received standard maternity care while the intervention group received the HealthyMoms smartphone app for 6 months (which includes multiple features, eg, information; push notifications; self-monitoring; and feedback features for GWG, diet, and physical activity) in addition to standard care. Outcome measures were assessed at Linköping University Hospital at baseline (mean 13.9 [SD 0.7] gestational weeks) and follow-up (mean 36.4 [SD 0.4] gestational weeks). The primary outcome was GWG and secondary outcomes were body fatness (Bod Pod), dietary habits (Swedish Healthy Eating Index) using the web-based 3-day dietary record Riksmaten FLEX, MVPA using the ActiGraph wGT3x-BT accelerometer, glycemia, and insulin resistance.
Results
Overall, we found no statistically significant effect on GWG (P=.62); however, the data indicate that the effect of the intervention differed by pre-pregnancy BMI, as women with overweight and obesity before pregnancy gained less weight in the intervention group as compared with the control group in the imputed analyses (–1.33 kg; 95% CI –2.92 to 0.26; P=.10) and completers-only analyses (–1.67 kg; 95% CI –3.26 to –0.09; P=.031]). Bayesian analyses showed that there was a 99% probability of any intervention effect on GWG among women with overweight and obesity, and an 81% probability that this effect was over 1 kg. The intervention group had higher scores for the Swedish Healthy Eating Index at follow-up than the control group (0.27; 95% CI 0.05-0.50; P=.017). We observed no statistically significant differences in body fatness, MVPA, glycemia, and insulin resistance between the intervention and control group at follow up (P≥.21).
Conclusions
Although we found no overall effect on GWG, our results demonstrate the potential of a smartphone app (HealthyMoms) to promote healthy dietary behaviors as well as to decrease weight gain during pregnancy in women with overweight and obesity.
Trial Registration
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03298555; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03298555
International Registered Report Identifier (IRRID)
RR2-10.2196/13011
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