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A 1-month nudge-based dietary intervention increased daily step counts by 1105 steps at 3 months in adults with type 2 diabetes.

A 1-month nudge-based dietary intervention increased daily step counts by 1105 steps at 3 months in …
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Key Takeaway
Note that spillover effects on step counts from a dietary nudge intervention were transient and not sustained beyond 3 months.

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.

Study Details

Study typeRct
EvidenceLevel 2
Follow-up1.0 mo
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
AIMS: Behavioural changes in one lifestyle domain may lead to improvements in others, known as spillover effects. This study examined whether a nudge-based dietary intervention could generate short-term (3 and 6 months) and long-term (24 months) spillover effects on physical activity and sleep among adults with type 2 diabetes. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A 2 × 2 factorial cluster-randomised controlled trial was conducted in 12 primary healthcare centres in Beijing, China. Adults aged 18-59 years with type 2 diabetes were randomised to a 1-month nudge-based dietary intervention (n = 204) or a control group (n = 73). Physical activity was assessed using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form and step-tracking mobile applications. Sleep quality was evaluated using the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index. Generalised linear mixed-effects models tested group, time, and interaction effects with covariate adjustment. The mediating effect of diabetes management self-efficacy was assessed for behaviour change. RESULTS: A significant short-term spillover effect was observed for daily step counts at 3 months (+1105 steps; p = 0.02), which was not sustained at 6 or 24 months. Exploratory mediation analyses indicated that diabetes management self-efficacy at 3 months did not statistically mediate the association between the dietary intervention and daily step counts at the same time point. Total physical activity and sleep quality showed modest but nonsignificant short-term improvements. CONCLUSIONS: The nudge-based dietary intervention produced observable but short-lived spillover effects on daily physical activity among adults with type 2 diabetes. These findings contribute empirical evidence on cross-behavioural spillover in diabetes management and underscore the need for future research to better elucidate the mechanisms and sustainability of such spillover effects.
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