Health@Work April 2016 E-tips: Can technology get us moving?

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Welcome to Health@Work's new GovDelivery newsletter. The purpose of

Health@Work's monthly E-tips is to help you promote better health at your workplace.


Coordinator E-tips

Can technology get us moving?

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A frequent request we get at Health@Work is for fitness app recommendations. If you too would like advice on this hot topic, check out this collaborative document. To make this resource even better, we’d love for you to add your input. What fitness tools have worked well for you personally and for your employees?

 

So do fitness tools help us get moving? Yes and no. For most people, motivation is the weak link in getting regular exercise. Current research suggests that fitness apps have a long way to go before they reliably increase and sustain most people’s motivation to move. In addition, technology can bring unintended consequences such as increased loneliness. To learn more about the impact of technology on people, watch this TED Talk by Sherry Turkle or read the transcript.

 

Currently we know that most fitness apps motivate people to download them, but not much more. If you are wondering what does motivate people to exercise, the short answer is activities that people love (Zumba® anyone?) or doing sedentary activities that people love—but while exercising. One example is walking on a treadmill while enjoying a favorite TV show or audiobook.

 

University of Michigan researcher Michelle Segar, Ph.D., argues that having a compelling motivation or reason for exercising helps people be active for a lifetime. She further emphasizes that people tend to do things that feel good and avoid things that feel bad. Thus, she strongly encourages people to both:


1. Find a reason to be active that is personally meaningful and compelling and


2. Find energizing ways to be active that feel good.

 

There is strong research behind Segar’s approach and it is why you hear so much about intrinsic motivation from Health@Work and others. When people genuinely look forward to being active— because of what it means to them personally or because of the immediate benefits they receive—they are more motivated to exercise in both the short and the long run.

 

Three tips for health promotion coordinators

 

1. The Heath brothers can teach you to motivate elephants. Researchers Chip and Dan Heath ask people to imagine a person riding an elephant through the forest on a path. Using this image of a person on an elephant, the Heaths advise those of us wanting to influence people’s behavior to think in terms of directing the rider, motivating the elephant, and shaping the path. The rider represents our rational mind. The six-ton elephant represents our emotions. The path is the organizational setting which, in this case, is the worksite. Watch this quick and entertaining YouTube to learn the six ways the Heath brothers suggest for making change in your organization. Then, map out how those practices apply at your worksite through this organizational workbook.

2. It’s not too late to join Hennepin County’s Step To It Challenge in May. The Step To It Challenge welcomes any worksite that wants to launch a free, four-week campaign that encourages employees to maintain or increase their daily exercise. Registration opens April 1 (no joke). Contact Linda Brandt with questions or to add your worksite to the competition

3. Hennepin County Public Health has its first Facebook page! “Like” our new Facebook page to stay on top of the latest resources and news about protecting and improving health.


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Employee E-tips

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Please click here to read this month’s E-tips titled “What Moves You?

 

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Contact us:


Linda Brandt, MPH

Senior Health Promotion Specialist

Hennepin County Human Services and Public Health Department

Public Health Promotion

linda.brandt@hennepin.us

 


About us:


Hennepin County Public Health Health@Work offers a broad range of low- and no-cost workplace wellness programs and services to employers in Hennepin County. For more information visit the Health@Work website

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