This study aims to analyze the effects of a 3 months duration self-applied online program, composed of 9 modules focused on promoting healthy lifestyle habits (healthy eating and increased physical activity), on obese or overweight adults with hypertension. Participants will be recruited from a hypertension unit of a public hospital. These patients will be randomized allocated into two interventional groups: experimental group will receive audiovisual instructions from their hypertension specialist doctor, and the control group from a doctor outside the patient. Assessment will include: body composition (BMI), blood pressure, levels of physical activity, functional capacity, fall risk, and quality of life.
Hypertension and obesity or overweight related, even other associated comorbidities, involve a worrying public health problem. The evidence shows that healthy eating and regular physical exercise, monitored by different means (internet, face to face, exercise diaries), play an important prevention role to maintain health while ageing. In this way, Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) have been demonstrated as a useful tool to promote health, working on barriers at the same time, such as low motivation and difficulties to maintain regular exercise or healthy eating habits. ICTs also allows to reach a wider audience at a lower cost, due to their good cost-benefit relationship and the possibility of increasing the efficiency of interventions. Therefore, this study aims to analyze the effects of a 3 months duration self-applied online program, composed of 9 modules focused on promoting healthy lifestyle habits (healthy eating and increased physical activity), on obese or overweight adults with hypertension. Participants will be recruited from a hypertension unit of a public hospital. These patients will be randomized allocated into two interventional groups: experimental group will receive audiovisual instructions from their hypertension specialist doctor, and the control group from a doctor outside the patient. Assessment will include: body composition (BMI), blood pressure, levels of physical activity, functional capacity, fall risk, and quality of life.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
135
The self-applied online program will comprise a three months behavioural intervention composed by 9 modules seeking to develop gradually achieving the goals of changing eating and physical activity habits, supported by audiovisual instructions. This group will receive access to the web-based lifestyle intervention (exercise and nutritional education), supported by audiovisual instructions given by their hypertension specialist doctor.
The self-applied online program will comprise a three months behavioural intervention composed by 9 modules seeking to develop gradually achieving the goals of changing eating and physical activity habits, supported by audiovisual instructions. This group will receive the same web-based lifestyle intervention (exercise and nutritional education), but in this case supported by audiovisual instructions given by a doctor outside the patient.
Enrique Rodilla Sala
Sagunto, Valencia, Spain
BMI
Body mass index
Time frame: At three months
Blood Pressure (BP)
Systolic and diastolic blood pressure
Time frame: At three months
Physical activity
Levels of physical activity (measured with SHORT-IPAQ Questionnaire). This Questionnaire measure assesses the types of intensity of physical activity and sitting time that people do as part of their daily lives are considered to estimate total physical activity in MET-min/week and time spent sitting.
Time frame: At three months
Fall risk
Fall risk perception (measured with FES Questionnaire). The 'Falls Efficacy Scale' (FES) directly evaluate the impact of fear of falling on social life. This scale has excellent reliability, is correlated with measures of balance and gait, and predicts future falls and decline in functional capacity. The 16 items of the FES are rated according to "how concerned you are about the possibility of falling", using the following responses (score in parentheses): not at all (1), somewhat (2), fairly (3), and very concerned (4). Thus, the total score ranges from 16 to 64 points. Higher values indicate less fall-related self-efficacy (and more concern about falling).
Time frame: At three months
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