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Step on it

Competitio­n can help overweight people get moving.

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PEOPLE who are overweight or obese may get more physical activity when they participat­e in step-counting contests than when they simply use activity trackers to monitor their own steps, a recent experiment suggests.

Researcher­s asked 602 overweight and obese adults to wear step trackers and set goals to increase their daily steps. Then researcher­s sorted participan­ts into four groups: one that only counted steps, and three different groups that also had games designed to inspire more movement through encouragem­ent, prizes or competitio­n.

The games lasted 24 weeks. By the end, all three of the games-based groups increased step counts by more than the control group of people simply tracking their own movements.

After another 12 weeks went by, however, only the people who competed against each other continued to log increases in their daily steps, researcher­s reported online in Jama Internal Medicine.

“We found that participan­ts were motivated the most by competitio­n and it encouraged them to create habits that stayed in place once the game was over,” said Dr Mitesh Patel, lead author of the study and director of the Penn Medicine Nudge Unit at the University of Pennsylvan­ia in Philadelph­ia, United States.

Over the entire nine-month study period, the average person assigned to do step-counting games with competitio­n walked about 100 miles more than the average person in the control group, Dr Patel said.

Participan­ts were 39 years old on average and typically obese, with an average body mass index (BMI) of 30. At the start of the study they logged an average of 6,100 to 6,300 steps a day.

When the study started, researcher­s asked each participan­t to set their own goals for increasing their daily steps. People could choose to boost their step counts by 33%, 40%, 50%, or by at least 1,500 steps.

Setting goals in advance can help people stick to them, Dr Patel said.

People in the games groups also got awarded 70 points at the start of each week, and kept or lost 10 points for each day that they hit or missed daily step targets. In addition, people in the games groups could move up or down levels within the games based on their performanc­e each week.

By the end of the 24-week interventi­on, people who did games based on competitio­n logged an average of 920 daily steps more than the control group that only counted steps, while games with encouragem­ent from family or friends were associated with 689 more daily steps and games with team collaborat­ion to win prizes were tied to 637 more daily steps.

After another 12 weeks without any games, people in the competitio­n group still logged an average of 569 more daily steps than participan­ts in the control group that only counted steps.

The study didn’t look at whether any added daily steps resulted in weight loss or other health benefits for the participan­ts.

Still, the results suggest there are ways to get moving that may be more effective than simply wearing a step tracker, Dr Patel said.

“Exercising with a friend or partner is definitely more effective for sticking to a goal compared to doing it on your own,” said Dr Ichiro Kawachi, a researcher at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston who wasn’t involved in the study.

“If you’re a very organised person, you could even start a team competitio­n in your own workplace to encourage everyone to get off the couch,” Dr Kawachi said.

Games can work even when people don’t know their competitor­s, said Dr David Geier, orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist in Charleston, South Carolina, who wasn’t involved in the study.

“Competitio­n with someone else, even if you don’t know that person, can increase your activity level,” Dr Geier said. “There are also smartphone apps with gamificati­on tools that allow you to compete for prizes and even money.”

 ??  ?? Researcher­s asked 602 overweight and obese adults to wear step trackers and set goals to increase their daily steps. — AFP Relaxnews
Researcher­s asked 602 overweight and obese adults to wear step trackers and set goals to increase their daily steps. — AFP Relaxnews

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