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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06446076
NA

Feedback Using behaviOral econOmic Theories on STEP countS in Cardiovascular Disease Patients

Sponsor: St. Luke's International Hospital, Japan

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a prospective, randomized controlled trial. The aim of the study is to verify the effectiveness of interventions using gamification with social incentives and social support to increase physical activity in patients with CVD through randomized controlled trials.

Official title: Feedback Using behaviOral econOmic Theories on STEP countS in Cardiovascular Disease Patients: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

325

Start Date

2024-06-12

Completion Date

2026-03-31

Last Updated

2025-05-15

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Gamification (Gain/Loss framing)

Participants will take part in a 6-week game-based program designed to help them reach their daily step goals. They are encouraged to maintain their daily step counts to achieve their daily step target over the 6-week intervention period. The gamification design incorporates two theoretically effective behavioral economics principles, "Fresh Start" and "Loss Aversion". All participants start from the Silver rank (middle rank), and their rank changes based on each final point of the week. The ranks are set from top to bottom as Platinum, Gold, Silver, Bronze, and Blue. In loss framing, if the daily step target is 6000 steps, maintaining 70 points for achieving 6000 steps on day 1, and a deduction of 10 points for not achieving it. In gain framing, achieving 6000 steps on day 1 results in an addition of 10 points, with no increase for not achieving it. After one week, ranks increase if the points at midnight on Sunday are 40 or above, and decrease if below this threshold.

BEHAVIORAL

Social support

Participants in this group are asked to designate a family member or friend to provide social support. This supporter is encouraged to check the participant's progress and provide support during the interventional period. The supporter will also receive weekly emails throughout the period, informing them about the participant's daily step counts, achievement status, points, levels, and other relevant information.

Locations (1)

St. Luke's International Hospital

Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan