在一个单一的安全网诊所通过政策促进身体活动:一项试点研究。

IF 2.2 Q3 SPORT SCIENCES
Pamela G Bowen, William Opoku-Agyeman, Olivio J Clay, McCaskill Gina, Veronica Mixon, Bisakha Pia Sen, Maria Pisu, Michelle Y Martin
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:缺乏运动是非裔美国人的一个主要问题,它会增加患慢性疾病的风险,包括肥胖、心脏病、糖尿病和认知能力下降。这项单诊所试点研究的目的是,以“运动即医学”倡议为指导,确定体育活动政策是否会增加初级保健提供者在门诊就诊时对体育活动的讨论。方法:研究设计包括三个时间点的数据收集。参与者从一家提供高质量医疗服务的诊所招募,不考虑支付能力。参与者包括109名年龄在24至81岁之间的非裔美国患者(干预前39名,干预后6周40名,干预后12个月30名)。主要结果测量是参与者的回答是否与他们的初级保健提供者进行了体育活动讨论。结果:在基线时,13%的参与者报告与他们的提供者进行体育活动讨论,在干预后6周,这一比例增加到33%。然而,在干预后12个月,报告进行体育活动讨论的参与者比例下降到23%。结论:运动是一种未被充分利用的循证策略,应该作为预防和管理许多慢性健康状况的药物来开处方。这项初步研究证明了改善与日常身体活动行为的重要性相关的医患沟通的可行性。需要进一步的研究来确定如何采用和维持诊所水平的政策,以鼓励每次就诊时讨论身体活动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Promoting Physical Activity Through Policy at a Single Safety-Net Clinic: A Pilot Study.

Background: Physical inactivity is a major issue for African Americans that contributes to increased risk for chronic conditions including obesity, heart disease, diabetes, and cognitive decline. The purpose of this single-clinic pilot study aimed to determine if a physical activity policy would increase primary-care provider discussions of physical activity during clinic visits using the Exercise is Medicine initiative as a guide.

Methods: The study design involved data collection at three time points. Participants were recruited from a single clinic providing high quality healthcare without regard to ability to pay. Participants included 109 African American patients between the ages of 24 and 81 (39 pre-intervention, 40 at 6 weeks post-intervention, and 30 at 12-months post-intervention). The primary outcome measure was participants' answers related to whether a physical activity discussion occurred with their primary-care provider.

Results: At baseline, 13% of participants reported a physical activity discussion with their provider, this increased to 33% at 6 weeks post-intervention. However, at 12-months post-intervention, the percentage of participants who reported a physical activity discussion decreased to 23%.

Conclusion: Exercise is an underused evidence-based strategy that should be prescribed as a medicine to prevent and manage many chronic health conditions. This pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of improving provider-patient communications related to the importance of daily physical activity behaviors. Further research is needed to determine how to employ and sustain a clinic level policy that will encourage physical activity discussions at every visit.

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CiteScore
1.60
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