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Activity trackers work best when ‘paired with wellness coaching’

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Physical activity Trackers are more likely to motivate people to get physically active if their use is coupled with wellness coaching – according to a new study published in the American College of Sports Medicine’s Health and Fitness Journal.

Researchers at Indiana University (IU) studied three aspects of tracking – how people behave with activity trackers, how the trackers affect people’s behavior and how the trackers can be effectively integrated into programmes which help people get more physically active.

For the study, the team at IU studied the university’s Ready to Move programme for two years.

The Ready to Move initiative is based on students who want to get fit meeting up with IU fitness staff a minimum of eight times during a 10-week period for coaching sessions, and each is given a Fitbit to help track activities.

Throughout the 10-week period, the coaches help participants establish a baseline number for the amount of steps they would like to achieve in a day. Participants then tracked their movement using a Fitbit, gradually increasing their goals and therefore their movement throughout the day.

The study showed that, of the 173 people taking part in the study, 93 per cent developed effective health and fitness goals – with 90 percent saying that a combination of coaching and a fitness tracker helped them sustain their health goals after coaching ended.

“There is a lot of information out there about people not using activity trackers, but we think that is because the people using them need support,” said Carol Kennedy-Armbruster, senior lecturer in the Department of Kinesiology at the IU School of Public Health-Bloomington and co-author of the study.

“We found that a combination of giving someone the device and then pairing them with someone who can help them learn how to use it actually works.”

To read the full study, click here for the American College of Sports Medicine’s Health and Fitness Journal.

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Physical activity trackers are more likely to motivate people to get physically active if coupled with wellness coaching – according to a new study published in the American College of Sports Medicine’s Health and Fitness Journal.
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