Effect of the Implementation of a Multiple-Behavior Self-Monitoring Intervention on Dietary Intake in Type 2 Diabetes: Secondary Data Analysis
Jisook Ko, Jing Wang, Ngozi Mbue, Susan Schembre, Stanley Cron

TL;DR
A study found that using mobile or paper diaries to track diet helped reduce calorie, fat, and carbohydrate intake in people with type 2 diabetes over three months.
Contribution
This study evaluates the effectiveness of mobile versus paper self-monitoring for dietary changes in diabetes management.
Findings
Participants using mobile diaries showed slightly higher adherence to self-monitoring.
There was a significant decrease in energy, fat, and carbohydrate intake over three months.
No significant difference in outcomes was found between mobile and paper diary users.
Abstract
An electronic diary embedded in a mobile device to monitor lifestyle can be as effective as traditional methods. However, the efficacy of self-monitoring multiple behaviors for dietary intake has not been well studied in people with diabetes. This study aimed to compare the effect of using technology-assisted self-monitoring versus paper diaries on changes in dietary intake. This is a secondary analysis of data collected from 39 people with type 2 diabetes as part of a 3-month pilot clinical trial. Changes in energy intake and the contribution of total fat intake and total carbohydrate intake to total calories (%) from baseline to after intervention (3 months) were evaluated. In total, 26 (67%) of the 39 participants preferred mobile diaries over paper diaries. Participants in the mobile diary group showed slightly higher self-monitoring adherence. Linear mixed modeling results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Impact of Technology on Adolescents
