Abstract

BackgroundFun For Wellness (FFW) is an online behavioral intervention developed to encourage growth in well-being by providing capability-enhancing learning opportunities to participants. Self-efficacy theory guides the conceptual model underlying the FFW intervention. Some initial evidence has been provided for the efficacy of FFW to promote: well-being self-efficacy; interpersonal, community, psychological and economic subjective well-being; and, interpersonal and physical well-being actions. The purpose of this paper is to describe the protocol for a new randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to provide the first investigation of the effectiveness of FFW to increase well-being and physical activity in adults with obesity in the United States of America.MethodsThe study design is a large-scale, prospective, parallel group RCT. Approximately 9 hundred participants will be randomly assigned to the FFW or Usual Care (UC) group to achieve a 1:1 group (i.e., FFW:UC) assignment. Participants will be recruited through an online panel recruitment company. Data collection, including determination of eligibility, will be conducted online and enrollment is scheduled to begin on 8 August 2018. Data collection will occur at baseline, 30 days and 60 days after baseline. Instruments to measure demographic information, anthropometric characteristics, self-efficacy, physical activity and well-being will be included in the battery. Data will be modeled under an intent to treat approach and/or a complier average causal effect approach depending on the level of observed engagement with the intervention.DiscussionThe effectiveness trial described in this paper builds upon the 2015 FFW efficacy trial and has the potential to be important for at least three reasons. The first reason is based upon a general scientific approach that the potential utility of interventions should be evaluated under both ideal (e.g., more controlled) and real-world (e.g., less controlled) conditions. The second reason is based upon the global need for readily scalable online behavioral interventions that effectively promote physical activity in adults. The third reason is based upon the troubling global trend toward obesity along with evidence for obesity as a risk factor for several major non-communicable diseases.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT03194854, registered 21 June 2017.

Highlights

  • Fun For Wellness (FFW) is an online behavioral intervention developed to encourage growth in wellbeing by providing capability-enhancing learning opportunities to participants

  • Participants who complied with the FFW intervention had significantly higher subjective well-being scores, as compared to potential compliers in the Usual Care (UC) group, in the following dimensions: interpersonal at 60 days (p = .042, Cohen’s d = 0.80), community at 30 days (p = .019, d = 0.71) and at 60 days (p = .046, d = 0.59), psychological at 60 days (p = .009, d = 0.56) and economic at 30 days (p = .007, d = 0.85) and at 60 days (p < .001, d = 0.94) post-baseline [1]

  • The purpose of this study is to provide the first investigation of the effectiveness of the FFW online behavioral intervention to increase well-being and physical activity in adults with obesity in the United States of America (USA)

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Summary

Introduction

Fun For Wellness (FFW) is an online behavioral intervention developed to encourage growth in wellbeing by providing capability-enhancing learning opportunities to participants. The purpose of this paper is to describe the protocol for a new randomized controlled trial (RCT) designed to provide the first investigation of the effectiveness of FFW to increase well-being and physical activity in adults with obesity in the United States of America. Before describing either the 2015 FFW efficacy trial or the protocol for the current FFW effectiveness trial, we begin with a brief review of the population (i.e., adults with obesity) targeted in, and a primary outcome (i.e., promotion of physical activity) targeted by, the current study. There is evidence that well-designed cognitive-behavioral interventions can successfully promote physical activity in adults with obesity [5]

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