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Reminder Strategies to Improve Meal-Logging Adherence: Micro-Randomized Trial
Sponsor: University of St.Gallen
Summary
This study is a single-center micro-randomized trial, aiming to examine the effects of two theory-driven reminder strategies on adherence to repeated, image-based meal logging in adults age 45 and older. Three times daily, participants are automatically randomized to receive one of three reminder messages prior to each habitual mealtime. The main research questions the trial aims to answer are: * Do loss-framed reminders (emphasizing loss of a daily financial reward for not logging) increase meal logging adherence in the two hours following a reminder, compared to a neutral reminder? * Do logging consistency reminders (providing feedback on recent logging streaks) increase meal logging adherence in the two hours following a reminder, compared to a neutral reminder? * Do the effects of loss-framed and logging consistency reminders differ from each other? Primary aim: To estimate the proximal effect of each reminder type on whether a participant logs a meal within two hours of receiving a reminder. Secondary aim: To examine whether within-person physiological patterns (e.g., heart rate variation) moderate response to reminders, with the goal of identifying physiological markers of receptivity to behavioral prompts. The trial aims to enroll 200 adults aged 45 and older. Participants attend a baseline visit for onboarding, consent, and device setup, followed by a 28 day remote intervention period during which they should photograph their meals three times daily (breakfast, lunch, dinner) and wear a smartwatch and smart ring continuously. Prior to each mealtime, they receive an automatically randomized reminder message. Participants earn a daily financial reward contingent on completing meal logging for that day. Note: This trial was registered retrospectively as enrollment began prior to registration. However, registration was completed before data collection was finished and before any data analysis was conducted.
Official title: Reminder Strategies to Improve Meal-Logging Adherence
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
45 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
200
Start Date
2025-12-08
Completion Date
2027-01
Last Updated
2026-04-29
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Interventions
Loss-Framed Reminder
Push notification emphasizing loss of daily financial reward for not logging the upcoming meal.
Logging Consistency Reminder
Push notification providing feedback on recent meal logging streak.
Neutral Reminder
Push notification reminding participants to log a meal.
Locations (1)
HOCH Health and School of Medicine, University of St. Gallen
Sankt Gallen, Canton of St. Gallen, Switzerland