학술논문

Feasibility and acceptability of a mobile messaging program within a church-based healthy living intervention for African Americans and Latinos
Document Type
article
Source
Health Informatics Journal. 26(2)
Subject
Public Health
Health Sciences
Nutrition
Prevention
Obesity
Behavioral and Social Science
Clinical Research
Black or African American
Aged
Feasibility Studies
Female
Healthy Lifestyle
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Male
Mobile Applications
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Text Messaging
United States
African American
churches
faith-based organizations
Hispanic
Latino
obesity
text messaging
Hispanic/Latino
Information Systems
Library and Information Studies
Medical Informatics
Health services and systems
Applied computing
Language
Abstract
Church-based programs can act on multiple levels to improve dietary and physical activity behaviors among African Americans and Latinos. However, the effectiveness of these interventions may be limited due to challenges in reaching all congregants or influencing behavior outside of the church setting. To increase intervention impact, we sent mobile messages (text and email) in English or Spanish to congregants (n = 131) from predominantly African American or Latino churches participating in a multi-level, church-based program. To assess feasibility and acceptability, we collected feedback throughout the 4-month messaging intervention and conducted a process evaluation using the messaging platform. We found that the intervention was feasible to implement and acceptable to a racially ethnically diverse study sample with high obesity and overweight rates. While the process evaluation had some limitations (e.g. low response rate), we conclude that mobile messaging is a promising, feasible addition to church-based programs aiming to improve dietary and physical activity behaviors.