An intervention to reduce sitting and increase light-intensity physical activity at work: Design and rationale of the 'Stand & Move at Work' group randomized trial

Matthew P Buman, Sarah L Mullane, Meynard J Toledo, Sarah A Rydell, Glenn A Gaesser, Noe C Crespo, Peter Hannan, Linda Feltes, Brenna Vuong, Mark A Pereira, Matthew P Buman, Sarah L Mullane, Meynard J Toledo, Sarah A Rydell, Glenn A Gaesser, Noe C Crespo, Peter Hannan, Linda Feltes, Brenna Vuong, Mark A Pereira

Abstract

Background: American workers spend 70-80% of their time at work being sedentary. Traditional approaches to increase moderate-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) may be perceived to be harmful to productivity. Approaches that target reductions in sedentary behavior and/or increases in standing or light-intensity physical activity [LPA] may not interfere with productivity and may be more feasible to achieve through small changes accumulated throughout the workday METHODS/DESIGN: This group randomized trial (i.e., cluster randomized trial) will test the relative efficacy of two sedentary behavior focused interventions in 24 worksites across two states (N=720 workers). The MOVE+ intervention is a multilevel individual, social, environmental, and organizational intervention targeting increases in light-intensity physical activity in the workplace. The STAND+ intervention is the MOVE+ intervention with the addition of the installation and use of sit-stand workstations to reduce sedentary behavior and enhance light-intensity physical activity opportunities. Our primary outcome will be objectively-measured changes in sedentary behavior and light-intensity physical activity over 12months, with additional process measures at 3months and longer-term sustainability outcomes at 24months. Our secondary outcomes will be a clustered cardiometabolic risk score (comprised of fasting glucose, insulin, triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol, and blood pressure), workplace productivity, and job satisfaction DISCUSSION: This study will determine the efficacy of a multi-level workplace intervention (including the use of a sit-stand workstation) to reduce sedentary behavior and increase LPA and concomitant impact on cardiometabolic health, workplace productivity, and satisfaction.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02566317 (date of registration: 10/1/2015).

Keywords: Cardiometabolic health; Cluster randomized trial; Physical activity; Sedentary behavior; Sit-stand workstations; Workplace.

Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

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Figure 1
Social ecological approach to reducing sitting and increasing light-intensity physical activity in the workplace.

Source: PubMed

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