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A hybrid type 1 trial of a digital behaviour change intervention for frailty prevention in community-dwelling older adults aged 60 years and older

Age Ageing. 2026 May 4;55(5):afag120. doi: 10.1093/ageing/afag120.

ABSTRACT

AIMS: This hybrid type 1 randomised controlled trial evaluated the effectiveness and implementation of a digital behaviour change intervention (DBCI) designed to empower older adults (60+) who are nonfrail and community-dwelling to adopt activity, vaccination, optimising medication, interaction and socialisation, diet and nutrition (AVOID) behaviours to prevent frailty.

METHODS: Sixty adults, from one South Australian local council, were randomised to receive the DBCI (n = 31) or wait (control; n = 29) for 6 months to receive limited DBCI access. Repeated-measures mixed models were used to assess between-group differences in changes in the primary outcome, the frailty index (FI), and the secondary outcome, quality-of-life (QoL; EQ-5D-5L) scores, from baseline to 6 months. Content analysis of survey and focus group data from the intervention group assessed technology acceptance, perceived knowledge and behaviour change. DBCI behaviour change techniques included baseline health and three-month behaviour change reports, education, a library of community resources, goal-setting and action planning and gamification and nudging. Participants in the intervention group received newsletters and were invited to face-to-face expert talks.

RESULTS: The median age was 75.4 years, and 63.3% of participants were female. In the intervention group, the mean FI score decreased from 0.135 (SD 0.053) to 0.115 (SD 0.071) over 6 months, while in the control group it increased from 0.134 (SD 0.048) to 0.160 (SD 0.087). The intervention group had a mean FI change of -0.044 [95% confidence interval (CI) -0.076 to -0.012] and a mean QoL change of 0.032 (95% CI 0.016 to 0.058) compared with the control group. Qualitative feedback indicated that the DBCI was acceptable, improved knowledge and supported behaviour change across AVOID behaviours.

CONCLUSION: A DBCI promoting the adoption of AVOID behaviours among nonfrail, community-dwelling older people is effective in preventing frailty and improving QoL when implemented. Solving technical barriers and incorporating intelligent technologies could enhance impact.

PMID:42096652 | DOI:10.1093/ageing/afag120