4.1 Article

Self-efficacy enhancing intervention increases light physical activity in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Journal

Publisher

DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.2147/COPD.S66846

Keywords

behavioral intervention; physical activity; emphysema; chronic bronchitis

Funding

  1. National Institute of Nursing Research [R01-NR08037]
  2. University of Illinois at Chicago General Clinical Research Center [M01-RR-13987]

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Background: People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease lead sedentary lives and could benefit from increasing their physical activity. The purpose of this study was to determine if an exercise-specific self-efficacy enhancing intervention could increase physical activity and functional performance when delivered in the context of 4 months of upper body resistance training with a 12-month follow-up. Methods: In this randomized controlled trial, subjects were assigned to: exercise-specific self-efficacy enhancing intervention with upper body resistance training (SE-UBR), health education with upper body resistance training (ED-UBR), or health education with gentle chair exercises (ED-Chair). Physical activity was measured with an accelerometer and functional performance was measured with the Functional Performance Inventory. Forty-nine people with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease completed 4 months of training and provided valid accelerometry data, and 34 also provided accelerometry data at 12 months of follow-up. The self-efficacy enhancing intervention emphasized meeting physical activity guidelines and increasing moderate-to-vigorous physical activity. Results: Differences were observed in light physical activity (LPA) after 4 months of training, time by group interaction effect (P=0.045). The SE-UBR group increased time spent in LPA by +20.68+/-29.30 minutes/day and the other groups decreased time spent in LPA by -22.43+/-47.88 minutes/day and -25.73+/-51.76 minutes/day. Changes in LPA were not sustained at 12-month follow-up. There were no significant changes in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, sedentary time, or functional performance. Subjects spent most of their waking hours sedentary: 72%+/-9% for SE-UBR, 68%+/-10% for ED-UBR, and 74%+/-9% for ED-Chair. Conclusion: The self-efficacy enhancing intervention produced a modest short-term increase in LPA. Further work is needed to increase the magnitude and duration of effect, possibly by targeting LPA.

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