Advice on exercise from a family physician can help sedentary patients to become active


Autoria(s): Bull, FC; Jamrozik, K
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

Objectives: To test the effectiveness, in the setting of primary health care, of verbal advice on exercise from a family physician (FP) combined with supporting written information. Design: A controlled trial with subjects allocated to a control group or one of two intervention groups using a balanced design based on day of the week. Setting: Ten general practices in Perth, Western Australia. Subjects: All sedentary patients consulting an FP. Intervention: Verbal advice on exercise from the FP and a pamphlet on exercise mailed to the patient's home address within 2 days of his/her visit to the doctor. Main outcome measure: Level of physical activity at followup. Results: 6,351 adult patients attending an FP practice completed a screening questionnaire, and 763 sedentary adults were recruited to the project. The response to follow-up, via a postal survey at 1, 6, and 12 months after the index consultation was 70%, 60%, and 57%, respectively. At 1 month a subsample of the control and intervention subjects were contacted for a telephone interview to verify self-reported levels of activity (n = 136). Treating all nonresponders as sedentary, at 1 month significantly more subjects in the combined intervention groups reported doing some physical activity (40%) compared with the control group (31%). Similarly, at 6 months, 30% of the control group and 38% of the combined intervention groups were now active. There was very little change at followup at 12 months (31% control and 36% intervention groups, respectively). Conclusion: A simple intervention aimed at the promotion of physical activity to sedentary patients in general practice can help reduce inactivity.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:35028

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Public, Environmental & Occupational Health #Medicine, General & Internal #Primary Care Physicians #Patient Education #Leisure Activities (recreation) #Physical Fitness #Intervention Studies #Health Education #General-practitioners #Activity Promotion #Health Promotion #Controlled Trial #Public-health #Primary-care #Behavior #Risk
Tipo

Journal Article