A 1-month nudge-based dietary intervention increased daily step counts by 1105 steps at 3 months in adults with type 2 diabetes.
This cluster-randomised controlled trial evaluated a 1-month nudge-based dietary intervention in adults aged 18-59 years with type 2 diabetes. The study population included 204 participants in the intervention group and 73 in the control group. The trial was conducted across 12 primary healthcare centres in Beijing, China. Follow-up assessments occurred at 3 months, 6 months, and 24 months. The primary outcome measured was daily step counts. Secondary outcomes included total physical activity, sleep quality, and diabetes management self-efficacy. No adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability data were reported.
At 3 months, the intervention showed a significant short-term spillover effect on daily step counts with an increase of 1105 steps. This result had a p-value of 0.02. However, this effect was not sustained at 6 months or 24 months. Improvements in total physical activity and sleep quality were modest but nonsignificant at the short term. Diabetes management self-efficacy did not statistically mediate the association between the dietary intervention and daily step counts at 3 months. No effect sizes or absolute numbers were reported for the secondary outcomes.
The study limitations include the observation that spillover effects were short-lived. The practice relevance is that this trial contributes empirical evidence on cross-behavioural spillover in diabetes management. Funding or conflicts of interest were not reported. The evidence does not support long-term maintenance of step count increases with this specific intervention approach.