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Creating Exercise Habits Through Incentives for Routines

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Body Weight
Registration Number
NCT02346799
Lead Sponsor
University of Pennsylvania
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to determine whether healthy habits can be formed more effectively when people are rewarded for repeated engagement in a given healthy behavior at a specific, routinized time each day rather than at any time.

Detailed Description

The investigators seek to examine the effect of incentives for routine exercise on the development of persistent exercise habits. Specifically, the purpose of this study is to determine whether healthy habits can be formed more effectively when people are rewarded for repeated engagement in a given healthy behavior at a specific, routinized time each day rather than at any time. Through a partnership with a Fortune-500 company, the investigators plan to run a large-scale, randomized field controlled trial with approximately 3,000-4,000 participants aimed at increasing exercise rates (as measured by gym visits). During an incentivized four week intervention period, the investigators will encourage participants to select a two-hour window during the day when they feel they are most willing and able to exercise. Depending on condition, participants will \[a\] receive no further instruction or incentives (control condition), \[b\] receive a $3 or $7 bonus for each day they exercise during the incentive period (flexible incentive condition), or \[c\] receive a $3 or $7 bonus for each day they exercise if and only if they exercise within their specified "workout window" (routine incentive condition). Additionally, participants in a fourth condition, the social routine incentive condition, will face the same incentives as those in the routine incentive condition, but will be required to coordinate the workout window they select with a partner in their office. The investigators predict that the less flexible incentives will lead to greater habit formation than flexible incentives, producing larger and longer-lasting increases in exercise post-intervention. The investigators further predict that coordinating with a workout partner will produce even stronger habit formation. The investigators will collect and analyze data from participants' worksite gyms, which track gym entries and exits, as well as pedometer data when available.

Our experiment will recruit employees at a Fortune-500 company who wish to exercise more. Recruitment will be done through an email and poster campaign. The registration stage will take approximately four weeks. All employees at all offices with on-site gyms will be eligible to enroll and upon enrollment will be asked to select a partner who works in the same office and who is also enrolling. Enrolling employees will also be asked to indicate their preferred daily workout time (a two hour "workout window") and to provide basic demographic and exercise-related information (e.g., gender, age, height, weight, number of gym visits per week). If registration exceeds the target sample size (4,000 employees), priority for enrollment will be given to employees who do not already exercise regularly (at least twice a week). The remaining participants will be assigned to a "holdout control" condition. Once registration is closed, participants will be assigned randomly (at the pairs level) to one of the four experimental conditions.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
2702
Inclusion Criteria
  • Participants must be full-time employees of partner company
Exclusion Criteria
  • N/A

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Average weekly number of 30+ minute visits to company gymUp to one year

Number of times per week participants enter the company gym and exit at least 30 minutes later

Duration of habitUp to one year

Length of time that weekly gym visits takes to return to baseline level

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Activity level as measured by Fitbit pedometersUp to one year

Number of steps taken during workouts, as measured by Fitbit pedometers

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Pennsylvania

🇺🇸

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

University of Pennsylvania
🇺🇸Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
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