Low- and High-Intensity Physical Activity Among People with HIV: Multilevel Modeling Analysis Using Sensor- and Survey-Based Predictors (Preprint)

Author:

Cook PaulORCID,Jankowski CatherineORCID,Erlandson Kristine MORCID,Reeder BlaineORCID,Starr WhitneyORCID,Flynn Makic Mary BethORCID

Abstract

BACKGROUND

High-intensity physical activity improves the health of people with HIV. Even when people have good intentions to engage in physical activity, they often find it difficult to maintain physical activity behavior in the long term. Two Minds Theory is a neurocognitive model that explains gaps between people’s intentions and behaviors based on the operations of 2 independent mental systems. This model predicts that everyday experiences will affect physical activity and that factors outside people’s awareness, such as sleep and stress, can have particularly strong effects on physical activity behaviors.

OBJECTIVE

We designed this study to test the effects of daily experiences on physical activity among people with HIV, including measures of people’s conscious experiences using daily electronic surveys and measures of nonconscious influences using sensor devices.

METHODS

In this study, 55 people with HIV wore a Fitbit Alta for 30 days to monitor their physical activity, sleep, and heart rate variability (HRV) as a physiological indicator of stress. Participants also used their smartphones to complete daily electronic surveys for the same 30 days about fatigue, self-efficacy, mood, stress, coping, motivation, and barriers to self-care. Time-lagged, within-person, multilevel models were used to identify the best prospective predictors of physical activity, considering the daily survey responses of people with HIV and sensor data as predictors of their physical activity the following day. We also tested baseline surveys as predictors of physical activity for comparison with daily variables.

RESULTS

Different people had different average levels of physical activity; however, physical activity also varied substantially from day to day, and daily measures were more predictive than baseline surveys. This suggests a chance to intervene based on day-to-day variations in physical activity. High-intensity physical activity was more likely when people with HIV reported less subjective fatigue on the prior day (<i>r</i>=−0.48) but was unrelated to actual sleep based on objective sensor data. High-intensity physical activity was also predicted by higher HRV (<i>r</i>=0.56), indicating less stress, lower HIV-related stigma (<i>r</i>=−0.21), fewer barriers to self-care (<i>r</i>=−0.34), and less approach coping (<i>r</i>=−0.34). Similar variables predicted lower-level physical activity measured based on the number of steps per day of people with HIV.

CONCLUSIONS

Some predictors of physical activity, such as HRV, were only apparent based on sensor data, whereas others, such as fatigue, could be measured via self-report. Findings about coping were unexpected; however, other findings were in line with the literature. This study extends our prior knowledge on physical activity by demonstrating a prospective effect of everyday experiences on physical activity behavior, which is in line with the predictions of Two Minds Theory. Clinicians can support the physical activity of people with HIV by helping their patients reduce their daily stress, fatigue, and barriers to self-care.

CLINICALTRIAL

Publisher

JMIR Publications Inc.

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