Will Women Interact with Technology to Understand Their Cardiovascular Risk and Potentially Increase Activity?

Q2 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
BioResearch Open Access Pub Date : 2019-07-03 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1089/biores.2018.0047
Kathy Hildebrand, Kathryn King-Shier, Lorraine Venturato, Christy Tompkins-Lane
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Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) continues to be one of the leading causes of death for women. New approaches need to be identified that will enable women to recognize modifiable risk factors and target their efforts toward prevention. The objectives of this study were to (1) determine if women would access Vivametrica to assess CVD risk, (2) identify whether women would increase their physical activity as measured by their daily step counts, and (3) elicit women's opinions about using the system, prospective observational study design. Thirty-six English-speaking women aged 45-64 years of age, without physical disability, were recruited. Participants attended two clinic visits and were asked to wear a sensor-based activity monitor (Garmin Vivosmart® HR Wrist Tracker) for 12 weeks. Twenty-six (72%) of participants accessed Vivametrica for the course of the study. The median number of steps at baseline and at study completion was 9329 (range 5406-18,228) and 10,181 (range 5398-21,401), respectively. There was no significant change in number of steps taken by the participants for the study period (Z = -1.086, p = 0.278). The women's responses to the three statements (related to using Vivametrica) are represented on bar graphs. Women's opinions were important to provide an understanding about how they realized the technology. Women did access Vivametrica. Women did not significantly increase their step count. However, these women were achieving beyond sedentary levels of activity (>5000 steps/day). Although the change in steps was not statistically significant, it represents a median increase in daily steps of 9%, which is clinically important.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

女性是否会通过与科技互动来了解自己的心血管风险并增加活动量?
心血管疾病(CVD)仍然是导致女性死亡的主要原因之一。需要确定新的方法,使妇女能够识别可改变的风险因素,并有针对性地进行预防。本研究的目标是:(1)确定妇女是否会使用 Vivametrica™ 评估心血管疾病风险;(2)确定妇女是否会增加以每日步数为衡量标准的体育锻炼;以及(3)征求妇女对使用该系统的意见。研究人员招募了 36 名讲英语的女性,年龄在 45-64 岁之间,无身体残疾。参与者接受了两次门诊,并被要求佩戴传感器式活动监测器(Garmin Vivosmart® HR 腕式追踪器)12 周。26名参与者(72%)在研究过程中使用了Vivametrica。基线和研究完成时的步数中位数分别为 9329 步(范围为 5406-18228 步)和 10181 步(范围为 5398-21401 步)。在研究期间,参与者的步数没有明显变化(Z = -1.086, p = 0.278)。妇女对三项陈述(与使用 Vivametrica 有关)的答复以柱状图表示。妇女的意见对于了解她们如何使用该技术非常重要。妇女确实使用了 Vivametrica。妇女的步数没有明显增加。但是,这些妇女的活动量超过了久坐不动的水平(>5000 步/天)。虽然步数的变化在统计学上并不显著,但它代表着每天步数增加的中位数为 9%,这在临床上具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BioResearch Open Access
BioResearch Open Access Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all)
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1
期刊介绍: BioResearch Open Access is a high-quality open access journal providing peer-reviewed research on a broad range of scientific topics, including molecular and cellular biology, tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, stem cells, gene therapy, systems biology, genetics, virology, and neuroscience. The Journal publishes basic science and translational research in the form of original research articles, comprehensive review articles, mini-reviews, rapid communications, brief reports, technology reports, hypothesis articles, perspectives, and letters to the editor.
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