Authors
Loes van den Bekerom, Laurens C van Gestel, Satu Koivusaari, Jet Bussemaker, Marieke A Adriaanse
Published in
British journal of health psychology. Volume 31. Issue 3. Pages e70090.
Abstract
Implementation intentions are simple action plans that may help people with lower socio-economic position (SEP) to navigate their behaviour in environments that undermine their healthy intentions. Implementation intentions hold potential in being a relatively simple, but remarkably effective behaviour change technique. However, it remains unclear whether such a micro-intervention fits the daily realities, needs and skills of lower SEP groups. We aimed to explore how adults with lower SEP (1) perceive (generating) implementation intentions for changing their health behaviour, and (2) independently generate implementation intentions.
Adults living in lower SEP neighbourhoods (n = 15) participated in semi-structured interviews. Participants were instructed to think aloud while independently generating an implementation intention following written instructions. Interview data were thematically analysed, and the plans were evaluated.
Participants perceived health as a central value in life, which translated into high readiness for health behaviour change. Implementation intentions were perceived as helpful and motivating because they provide structure, support small, doable steps and stimulate conscious decisions and reflections. Participants expressed strong motivation to use implementation intentions in daily life. However, although participants expressed that generating their plan was pleasant and easy, guidance was frequently requested and provided during plan formation. Besides, generated plans often lacked the essential if-then structure and concreteness.
Implementation intentions appear acceptable and appealing as a behaviour change strategy for adults with lower SEP. However, independent formation of well-structured, actionable plans is challenging. Guided support is needed to ensure successful use of implementation intentions in lower SEP populations.
PMID:
42429031
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 10 Jul 2026.
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