Effectiveness of Smartphone-Based Dyadic Interventions to Increase Physical Activity in Romantic Couples: Microrandomized Trial
Patrick Stefan Höhener, Robert Tobias, James Martin Allen, Pascal Küng, Urte Scholz

TL;DR
A smartphone-based study found that dyadic interventions can effectively increase physical activity in romantic couples.
Contribution
The study introduces dyadic and collaborative planning and just-in-time adaptive interventions for promoting physical activity in couples.
Findings
Dyadic interventions increased both device-based and self-reported physical activity during the intervention phase.
Dyadic just-in-time adaptive interventions increased physical activity for both the actor and their partner.
The effectiveness of interventions varied based on the target, type, and timing.
Abstract
Social exchange processes, such as social support and social control, can promote health behavior change. However, these processes are often neglected when studying health behavior change and designing interventions. Intervening on these social exchange processes using dyadic interventions may provide a promising approach to promote health behaviors. This study aimed to investigate the effects of dyadic interventions to increase moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) in romantic couples. Furthermore, we explored how the target, type, and timing of the interventions affect their effectiveness. In total, 38 romantic couples (mean age 34.01, SD 11.03 y) were recruited through online advertisements and participated in a smartphone-based microrandomized trial over 55 days consisting of control and intervention phases. The fully automated dyadic interventions included a one-time…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Mental Health Interventions · Music Therapy and Health · Child Therapy and Development
