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Do women with fibromyalgia adhere to walking for exercise programs to improve their health?
Systematic review and meta-analysis
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Title: Do women with fibromyalgia adhere to walking for exercise programs to improve their health?
Systematic review and meta-analysis |
Authors: Sanz Baños, Yolanda Pastor-Mira, María Ángeles Lledó, Ana López Roig, Sofía Peñacoba, Cecilia Sánchez-Meca, Julio |
Editor: Taylor and Francis Group |
Department: Departamentos de la UMH::Ciencias del Comportamiento y salud |
Issue Date: 2017-07-07 |
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/30812 |
Abstract:
Background: Walking is recommended for fibromyalgia, but the rate of adherence to this exercise is not
known. Poor adherence to physical exercise can limit the effectiveness in health benefits.
Objectives: To examine adherence to interventions that include walking for fibromyalgia and to explore
its moderators among the characteristics of patients, of the walking prescription and of the interventions.
Data sources: References from 2000 to 2016 have been collected through PubMed, PsycINFO, CINAHL,
SPORTDiscus, Cochrane, and Teseo.
Study selection: We included quasi-experimental and randomized controlled trials in adults with fibromyalgia
that involved walking for exercise. Two authors screened records independently and disagreements
were resolved by discussion.
Data extraction: Independently extracted by two assessors. Methodological quality of the studies was
assessed using an ad hoc scale.
Data synthesis: Nineteen trials, 32 experimental groups, recruited a total of 983 participants (96.78%
women) with mean ages between 45 and 60.60. Adherence to the intervention program was reported in
19 of 32 experimental groups and ranged, on average, from 73 to 87.20% depending on the type of
assessment. Most relevant moderators of adherence were the recruitment of participants through physicians
and the nurses as supervisors of exercise.
Conclusion: Adherence rates (attendance at sessions) to programs with walking were high. However, a
lack of information precludes knowledge of whether participants sustained walking between sessions or
after the treatment. Further work is required to examine in greater depth such contextual variables of
interventions as the professional-participant relationship or to explore other possible moderators such as
patient expectations of the treatment.
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Keywords/Subjects: systematic review metaanalysis fibromyalgia walking patient adherence |
Knowledge area: CDU: Filosofía y psicología: Psicología |
Type of document: application/pdf |
Access rights: info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess |
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09638288.2017.1347722 |
Appears in Collections: Artículos Ciencias del Comportamiento y Salud
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