Abstract
Smartphone apps might represent an opportunity to promote adherence to the Mediterranean diet (MedDiet). This study aimed to evaluate the quality of commercially available apps for the MedDiet and the presence of behavioural change techniques (BCTs) used by these apps. A systematic search was conducted on the Apple App and Google Play stores in November 2021. Apps were included if they provided information on the MedDiet or if their objective was to promote a healthy lifestyle through adherence to the MedDiet. Eligible apps were independently evaluated by two reviewers with regards to their quality (engagement, functionality, aesthetics and information quality) using the 5-point Mobile App Rating Scale (MARS; with higher scores indicating higher quality), and the presence of BCTs using an established 26-item BCT taxonomy. Of the 55 analysed apps, 52 (94.5%) were free, 50 (90.9%) provided recipe ideas, 29 (52.7%) provided meal plans, and 22 (40%) provided information on the health benefits of the MedDiet. The overall quality mean MARS score was 2.84 (SD 0.42), with functionality being the highest scored MARS domain (mean=3.58, SD 0.44) and en-gagement the lowest (mean=2.29, SD 0.61). The average number of BCTs in the analysed apps was 2.3 (SD 1.4; range: 0-6 per app). The number of BCTs was positively correlated with app information quality (rrho=0.269, p=0.047), overall MARS score (rrho=0.267, p=0.049), app subjective quality (rrho=0.326, p=0.015) and app-specific quality (rrho=0.351, p=0.009). These findings suggest that cur-rently available apps might provide information on the MedDiet, but incorporation of more BCTs is warranted to maximise the potential for behaviour change towards the MedDiet.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 1290 |
Journal | Nutrients |
Volume | 14 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 18 Mar 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Structured keywords
- SPS Exercise, Nutrition and Health Sciences
Keywords
- Behaviour change techniques
- content analysis
- mediterranean diet
- mobile apps (mHealth)
- quality
- smartphones