Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention

Objective To explore how physically inactive patients, with metabolic risk factors, experienced long term treatment with physical activity on prescription. Design Qualitative content analysis of individual interviews after strategical sampling of respondents. Setting Fifteen primary health care cent...

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Main Authors: Monica Joelsson, Stefan Lundqvist, Maria E. H. Larsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-10-01
Series:Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1842965
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spelling doaj-d819d60eccc7426582bcafc89755130a2021-01-04T17:35:55ZengTaylor & Francis GroupScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care0281-34321502-77242020-10-0138439941010.1080/02813432.2020.18429651842965Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care interventionMonica Joelsson0Stefan Lundqvist1Maria E. H. Larsson2Närhälsan Gibraltar Rehabilitation, Region Västra GötalandDepartment of Health and Rehabilitation, Unit of Physiotherapy, Institute of neuroscience and Physiology, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of GothenburgDepartment of Health and Rehabilitation, Unit of Physiotherapy, Institute of neuroscience and Physiology, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of GothenburgObjective To explore how physically inactive patients, with metabolic risk factors, experienced long term treatment with physical activity on prescription. Design Qualitative content analysis of individual interviews after strategical sampling of respondents. Setting Fifteen primary health care centres in Gothenburg, Sweden. Subjects Twenty physically inactive patients, with one or more metabolic syndrome components, 9 women, 11 men, mean age 58 years (25–73); 10 patients were responders and 10 non-responders to the intervention. Main outcome measures Categories describing treatment effect and successful intervention Results The interviews revealed three categories of effect. First, individual adjustments contributed to increased physical activity. Second, follow-up and support were valuable aids for prioritising and maintaining lifestyle changes. Third, motivation could be higher if patients make their own choices and experienced positive health effects. The overarching emerging theme was ‘tailored physical activity on prescription with regular follow-ups can contribute to increased and maintained motivation and physical activity levels.’ Conclusion Physical activity on prescription in a Swedish primary care setting was successful when the recommended physical activity and follow up was individually adapted.KEY POINTS Individually adapted physical activity on prescription gave insight to increase physical activity levels in a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention directed towards inactive patients with the metabolic syndrome Motivation increased for patients designing their own routines for physical activity. Experiences of positive health effects helped maintain or increase physical activity levels, and follow-up and support from healthcare professionals helped to prioritise life style changes.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1842965physical activitymetabolic risk factor primary health care motivationqualitative study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monica Joelsson
Stefan Lundqvist
Maria E. H. Larsson
spellingShingle Monica Joelsson
Stefan Lundqvist
Maria E. H. Larsson
Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
physical activity
metabolic risk factor primary health care motivation
qualitative study
author_facet Monica Joelsson
Stefan Lundqvist
Maria E. H. Larsson
author_sort Monica Joelsson
title Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
title_short Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
title_full Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
title_fullStr Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
title_full_unstemmed Tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. A qualitative study of a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention
title_sort tailored physical activity on prescription with follow-ups improved motivation and physical activity levels. a qualitative study of a 5-year swedish primary care intervention
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care
issn 0281-3432
1502-7724
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Objective To explore how physically inactive patients, with metabolic risk factors, experienced long term treatment with physical activity on prescription. Design Qualitative content analysis of individual interviews after strategical sampling of respondents. Setting Fifteen primary health care centres in Gothenburg, Sweden. Subjects Twenty physically inactive patients, with one or more metabolic syndrome components, 9 women, 11 men, mean age 58 years (25–73); 10 patients were responders and 10 non-responders to the intervention. Main outcome measures Categories describing treatment effect and successful intervention Results The interviews revealed three categories of effect. First, individual adjustments contributed to increased physical activity. Second, follow-up and support were valuable aids for prioritising and maintaining lifestyle changes. Third, motivation could be higher if patients make their own choices and experienced positive health effects. The overarching emerging theme was ‘tailored physical activity on prescription with regular follow-ups can contribute to increased and maintained motivation and physical activity levels.’ Conclusion Physical activity on prescription in a Swedish primary care setting was successful when the recommended physical activity and follow up was individually adapted.KEY POINTS Individually adapted physical activity on prescription gave insight to increase physical activity levels in a 5-year Swedish primary care intervention directed towards inactive patients with the metabolic syndrome Motivation increased for patients designing their own routines for physical activity. Experiences of positive health effects helped maintain or increase physical activity levels, and follow-up and support from healthcare professionals helped to prioritise life style changes.
topic physical activity
metabolic risk factor primary health care motivation
qualitative study
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02813432.2020.1842965
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