Motivation Matters: Elucidating Factors Driving Exercise in People With Parkinson Disease.

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Caro I Cools, Sonja A Kotz, Bastiaan R Bloem, Annelien A Duits, Nienke M de Vries
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: Despite the known benefits of exercise for people with Parkinson disease (PwP), activity levels are not sustained over time due to various motivators and barriers impacting exercise adherence. Previously, studies on exercise adherence in PwP explored such barriers without describing or providing specific questions related to the determinants of motivation. Exercise adherence in PwP can be improved by addressing 3 key perspectives on motivation: personal factors (age, sex, premorbid motivation level, time when PwP started exercising, exercise before diagnosis, self-compassion), disease-related factors (perceived disease severity, depression score), and environmental factors (distance to exercise therapy, weather conditions, encouragement received from partners).

Methods: Six hundred seventy-two PwP from the Netherlands participated in an online survey that comprised questionnaires on demographics, depression, self-compassion, perceived disease severity, and additional questions on sports, motivation, and barriers related to sports. A multiple regression analysis was applied with current motivation as an outcome measure, and age, sex, perceived disease severity, premorbid motivation, depression, self-compassion, age starting exercising, and exercise before diagnosis as determinants.

Results: The results revealed that current motivation levels to exercise are associated with higher levels of premorbid motivation (b = 0.14), greater self-compassion (b = 0.32), lower age (b = -0.03), lower perceived disease severity (b = -0.10), and lesser degrees of depression (b = -0.10). Barriers stopping PwP from exercising were fatigue, weather conditions, and having less energy for other activities after exercising.

Conclusion: Understanding these motivational factors and barriers helps shape and promote better exercise adherence and thereby ascertain greater symptomatic benefits for PwP.

Impact: This study outcome gives health care professionals insight into determinants of motivation and exercise adherence, which will help enabling tailored approaches for improved engagement.

动机问题:阐明帕金森病患者运动的驱动因素。
目的:尽管已知运动对帕金森病(PwP)患者有益,但由于影响运动依从性的各种动机和障碍,运动水平并不能持续一段时间。以前,关于PwP运动依从性的研究探讨了这些障碍,但没有描述或提供与动机决定因素相关的具体问题。帕金森病患者(PwP)的运动依从性可以通过解决动机的三个关键角度来提高:个人因素(年龄、性别、发病前动机水平、PwP开始运动的时间、诊断前的运动、自我同情)、疾病相关因素(感知疾病严重程度、抑郁评分)和环境因素(距离运动治疗的距离、天气条件、从伴侣那里得到的鼓励)。方法:672名来自荷兰的PwP参与了一项在线调查,包括人口统计、抑郁、自我同情、感知疾病严重程度的问卷,以及关于运动、动机和与运动相关的障碍的附加问题。采用多元回归分析,以当前动机作为结果测量,以年龄、性别、感知疾病严重程度、发病前动机、抑郁、自我同情、开始锻炼年龄和诊断前锻炼作为决定因素。结果:结果显示,当前的运动动机水平与较高的病前动机水平(b = 0.14)、较高的自我同情(b = 0.32)、较低的年龄(b = -0.03)、较低的疾病严重程度(b = -0.10)和较轻的抑郁程度(b = -0.10)相关。阻碍工兵运动的因素包括疲劳、天气状况,以及运动后没有精力从事其他活动。结论:了解这些动机因素和障碍有助于形成和促进更好的运动依从性,从而确定对PwP有更大的症状益处。影响:这项研究结果让医疗保健专业人员深入了解动机和坚持锻炼的决定因素,这将有助于采用量身定制的方法来提高参与度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Physical Therapy
Physical Therapy Multiple-
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
187
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Physical Therapy (PTJ) engages and inspires an international readership on topics related to physical therapy. As the leading international journal for research in physical therapy and related fields, PTJ publishes innovative and highly relevant content for both clinicians and scientists and uses a variety of interactive approaches to communicate that content, with the expressed purpose of improving patient care. PTJ"s circulation in 2008 is more than 72,000. Its 2007 impact factor was 2.152. The mean time from submission to first decision is 58 days. Time from acceptance to publication online is less than or equal to 3 months and from acceptance to publication in print is less than or equal to 5 months.
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