Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03440580

BOOSTH: Promoting Physical Activity in Primary Schools in Combination With Serious Gaming

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
713 (actual)
Sponsor
Maastricht University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
7 Years – 13 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Physical inactivity is considered to be one of the ten principal risk factors for death worldwide. Children need to perform one hour of daily moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity whereof at least twice a week these activities are of vigorous intensity. In 2010, the percentage of 4-11 year-old normoactive Dutch children was approximately 20%.Previous interventions that aimed to increase childhood physical activity produced small to negligible effects. One possible explanation is that individuals were not intrinsically motivated towards physical activity during the intervention period. Children spend a substantial amount of their time behind a game consule. There are a number of applications that motivate increase in physical activity in a fun way through engaging individuals in games that mix real and computing worlds. These games became known as serious games. In this study we want to investigate if the incorporation of a serious game BOOSTH in combination with an activity tracker and battle to stimulate physical activity behaviour in primary school children (grades 5th to 7th).

Detailed description

The study design will be a randomized controlled trial regarding a physical activity intervention. A 1:1 randomization will be applied with intervention schools and matched control schools. The intervention school will recieve the BOOSTH intervention. The intervention duration is 6 months. Measurements will be performed at baseline and 3, 6 and 12 months after the start. The investigational treatment is the BOOSTH physical activity intervention. Children in the intervention school will start with the BOOSTH intervention on top of the regular PE lessons. The child will receive the BOOSTH activity tracker. The child (under supervision of the teacher) needs to download the BOOSTH sync app and the BOOSTH game app. Therefore it is important that the school works with a device with Bluetooth. We will create a login account for each child. After installing the apps, the activity tracker measures step counts, which are translated into activity points. These activity points will be used to unlock levels in the BOOSTH game app. The child synchronizes their activity points, with Bluetooth connection, in the BOOSTH sync app and immediately the child can open the BOOSTH game app to play a level in the game. The child needs seven green lights (corresponding to 30 minutes of performed physical activity) to unlock a level in the game. The first four levels are for free, to gain the interests of the child, but thereafter the child needs to be physically active to unlock the rest of the levels in the game.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEBOOSTHBOOSTH as a serious game is used as a tool to motivate children to perform more PA. BOOSTH uses the combination of a smartphone game and a pedometer that assesses daily PA by measuring steps/day. The BOOSTH activity monitor is a wrist-worn activity monitor that is able to provide online feedback on the child's PA levels. Moreover, BOOSTH is a reward-based game as a child is given incentive to increase their PA level, in order to acquire activity points which later can be used to unlock levels and progress in the BOOSTH game.

Timeline

Start date
2018-08-17
Primary completion
2020-07-01
Completion
2020-07-01
First posted
2018-02-22
Last updated
2020-09-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03440580. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.