complish. The health effects of such interventions are often only seen in the long run; increasing physical activity or healthful dietary changes will not immediately reduce the risks for heart disease or diabetes. It maye take years before such healthful behavior changes show in morbidity or mortality statistics. Evaluation of behavioral nutrition and physical activity is therefore mostly beased on analyses of changes in these behaviors, not on changes in actual health or disease. Economic evaluations, i.e. assessing the cost-effectiveness of behavior change interventions is therefore hardly ever done.
However, in recent years, evaluation of health effects and of the cost-effectiveness of behavior change interventions is more often attempted, by using epidemiological modelling. In such model-based evaluations the behavior change effects, e.g. the effects of the intervention in terms of minutes of extra physical activity per week, or extra servings of fruit and vegetables per day, is translated into expected health effects by means of epidemiological models that are based on the best available evidence on how such changes in behavior predict changes in health and disease in the (sometimes many) years to come.
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, published in the International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity assessed the cost-effectiveness of the Vitalum interventions, a computer-tailored health education intervention, a motivational interviewing intervention, and a combination of both, to promote physical activity and fruit and vegetable intakes among older adults. This study also provides clear indications that these interventions are cost-effective, with the best economic evidence for the computer-tailored intervention.
These studies contribute to better evidence-based health education and health promotion and do indicate that such interventions can be cost-effective.
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