Abstract Overview
Background: Multicomponent digital interventions have the potential to reduce occupational sedentary behaviour (SB), but less is known about the feasibility of these interventions among hybrid office workers.
Purpose: The aim of this pilot study was to examine the usage, acceptability, usability, perceived usefulness, and satisfaction of home-office workers with the Click2Move Application (C2M App).
Methods: A single-group test was undertaken for one working week. Home-office workers at least once per week (n=21) received the C2M App, consisting of an activity-tracker and a smartphone application, including strategies at environmental and individual level. Outcomes were assessed after the study using four 5-point Likert scales including more than one item and three open questions. Descriptive analysis, utilizing median and median absolute deviation (MAD-M), and content analysis were conducted.
Results: Participants used the C2M App in average 4 days for 8 hours each day. The app was considered as acceptable (median: 4; MAD-M: 0.33 – 0.86), and easy to use (median: 4; MAD-M: 0.71). Additionally, the activity tracker improved the application information. Participants perceived the contents of the programme as quite a bit useful (median: 4; MAD-M: 0.71 – 0.86), in exception of cooperative challenges (median: 3; MAD-M: 0.76). Participants were satisfied with the programme (median: 4; MAD-M: 0.95), with the awareness about their own activity patterns being the most liked item, while the connection problems between activity tracker and the application was the most annoying thing, needing a refine.
Conclusions: The C2M App was acceptable, useful, and satisfactory for home-office workers. Therefore, after applying improvements, future research should evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions.
Practical implications: These results contribute to the understanding of digital solutions for reducing SB among home-office workers, leading a way for future occupational interventions.
Funding: The Click2Move project is supported by the European Commission under the Erasmus+ programme (ERASMUS-SPORT-2021-SCP-101050490).
Additional Authors