Deakin University
Browse
dunstan-effectivenessofthestand-2018.pdf (551.1 kB)

Effectiveness of the stand more at (SMArT) work intervention: Cluster randomised controlled trial

Download (551.1 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2018-10-01, 00:00 authored by C L Edwardson, T Yates, S J H Biddle, M J Davies, David DunstanDavid Dunstan, D W Esliger, L J Gray, B Jackson, S E O'Connell, G Waheed, F Munir
Abstract

Objectives
To evaluate the impact of a multicomponent intervention (Stand More AT (SMArT) Work) designed to reduce sitting time on short (three months), medium (six months), and longer term (12 months) changes in occupational, daily, and prolonged sitting, standing, and physical activity, and physical, psychological, and work related health.


Design
Cluster two arm randomised controlled trial.


Setting
National Health Service trust, England.


Participants
37 office clusters (146 participants) of desk based workers: 19 clusters (77 participants) were randomised to the intervention and 18 (69 participants) to control.


Interventions
The intervention group received a height adjustable workstation, a brief seminar with supporting leaflet, workstation instructions with sitting and standing targets, feedback on sitting and physical activity at three time points, posters, action planning and goal setting booklet, self monitoring and prompt tool, and coaching sessions (month 1 and every three months thereafter). The control group continued with usual practice.


Main outcome measures
The primary outcome was occupational sitting time (thigh worn accelerometer). Secondary outcomes were objectively measured daily sitting, prolonged sitting (≥30 minutes), and standing time, physical activity, musculoskeletal problems, self reported work related health (job performance, job satisfaction, work engagement, occupational fatigue, sickness presenteeism, and sickness absenteeism), cognitive function, and self reported psychological measures (mood and affective states, quality of life) assessed at 3, 6, and 12 months. Data were analysed using generalised estimating equation models, accounting for clustering.


Results
A significant difference between groups (in favour of the intervention group) was found in occupational sitting time at 12 months (−83.28 min/workday, 95% confidence interval −116.57 to −49.98, P=0.001). Differences between groups (in favour of the intervention group compared with control) were observed for occupational sitting time at three months (−50.62 min/workday, −78.71 to −22.54, P<0.001) and six months (−64.40 min/workday, −97.31 to −31.50, P<0.001) and daily sitting time at six months (−59.32 min/day, −88.40 to −30.25, P<0.001) and 12 months (−82.39 min/day, −114.54 to −50.26, P=0.001). Group differences (in favour of the intervention group compared with control) were found for prolonged sitting time, standing time, job performance, work engagement, occupational fatigue, sickness presenteeism, daily anxiety, and quality of life. No differences were seen for sickness absenteeism.


Conclusions
SMArT Work successfully reduced sitting time over the short, medium, and longer term, and positive changes were observed in work related and psychological health.


Trial registration

Current Controlled Trials

History

Journal

BMJ

Volume

363

Article number

k3870

Pagination

1 - 15

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0959-8146

eISSN

1756-1833

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal