Feasibility and Preliminary Efficacy of Co-Designed and Co-Created Healthy Lifestyle Social Media Intervention Programme the Daily Health Coach for Young Women: A Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial

Nutrients. 2024 Dec 18;16(24):4364. doi: 10.3390/nu16244364.

Abstract

Background: Young women spend 50 min daily on social media (SM); thus, SM platforms are promising for health interventions. This study tested the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of the co-designed SM intervention the Daily Health Coach (DHC). The DHC is a 3-month healthy lifestyles intervention programme, targeting eating, physical activity, and social wellbeing behaviours in women aged 18-24, via the dissemination of health and nutrition content on social media platform Instagram.

Methods: The programme was tested using an assessor-blinded, two-arm pilot randomised controlled trial with 46 participants over 12 weeks. Engagement was assessed via SM metrics; acceptability via post-programme questionnaires; and feasibility included retention, randomisation, recruitment, and data collection. Secondary outcomes-dietary quality, physical activity, social influence, disordered eating behaviours, body image, and digital health literacy-were assessed using validated surveys. Analyses included t-tests, chi-squared tests, and linear mixed models. The treatment effects were estimated by testing mean score differences from baseline to 3 months for intention-to-treat populations.

Results: The DHC scored 83.6% for programme satisfaction. Over time, a significant decrease in body image disturbance was observed (p = 0.013). A significant group-by-time interaction for digital health literacy (p = 0.002) indicated increased ability to discern evidence-based nutrition information (p = 0.006). The waitlist control group showed increased social influence compared to the intervention group (p = 0.034). No other significant changes were observed.

Conclusion: The DHC is a feasible and acceptable method for disseminating nutrition information. Larger studies are needed to determine efficacy.

Keywords: behavioural health; diet; health promotion; social media intervention; young women.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Body Image / psychology
  • Diet
  • Exercise*
  • Feasibility Studies*
  • Feeding Behavior / psychology
  • Female
  • Health Behavior
  • Health Literacy
  • Health Promotion / methods
  • Healthy Lifestyle*
  • Humans
  • Pilot Projects
  • Social Media*
  • Young Adult