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August 22 2001
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Health Care Practitioners You Can Motivate Your Patients to Exercise

 

Medical experts recommend that healthy Americans perform at least 30 minutes of moderate exercise on most days of the week, but no one is quite sure how to dislodge sedentary people from their couches. New research shows that advice from doctors and other health professionals can make a difference.

In a two-year study of sedentary adults, researchers found that exercise education programs -- and even just a little guidance from a doctor -- help get inactive people moving. For women, more intensive education efforts seem to work particularly well.

Among nearly 900 healthy adults aged 35 to 75, exercise advice and education boosted the number who met the minimum recommendations for exercise. Up to 30% of men and 26% of women met the requirement two years after starting the study.

But the overall success varied between men and women, with women faring better with a more intensive intervention, while men generally did as well with a doctor's advice as with a more involved program.

Only about 20% of US adults engage in regular physical activity for a half-hour on most days of the week.

Guidelines advise doctors to ask patients about their exercise habits and, if needed, offer advice on how to increase their activity levels. But whether such advice helps and whether stronger interventions might work better is unknown.

Simons-Morton and her colleagues looked at these questions by testing three types of exercise interventions, all based in 11 primary care practices in the US. One group of patients received standard exercise advice and educational materials from their doctors.

A second group received the advice and materials plus "assistance" in the form of an initial counseling session with a health educator, followed by regular correspondence with the educator through the mail.

The third group -- the "counseling" group -- received all of this advice, materials, and assistance plus periodic phone calls from health educators and weekly classes on maintaining physical activity.

The investigators found that, for women, the two more intensive programs were more effective in improving their cardiovascular endurance over two years, based on treadmill exercise tests. The women's maximal oxygen uptake during exercise -- a measure of cardiovascular health -- was about 5% higher than that of women in the advice group.

But the situation was different for men, for whom there were no significant differences in fitness among groups. Regardless of group, the men's treadmill performance improved early on in the study, but had declined closer to pre-study levels by the two-year mark.

These results suggest that women might benefit from more rigorous efforts to promote exercise. It would seem advisable to use these, or similar, interventions for inactive women patients interested in increasing their physical activity, while delivering physician advice and educational materials to men.

But it is doubtful that doctors are following current recommendations, let alone launching more intensive efforts to promote exercise.

Despite "undisputed" evidence of the health benefits of exercise, US physicians advise only a minority of their patients about physical activity.

JAMA August 8, 2001;286:677-687, 717-719



Dr. Mercola Dr. Mercola's Comments:

It is a sad tragedy that most physicians don't realize that exercise is more potent than most of the drugs that they use.

It should be used like a drug and prescribed very carefully. I have recently resorted to providing most new patients with a printed form that they need to complete and bring back on their one month return visit with me.

I provide them with specific details such as training heart rate, type and time of exercise, frequency and how fast to progress. They are expected to fill in the sheet in the following four weeks.

This has improved compliance tremendously in other physicians who have used this program and I would encourage other health care professionals to consider adopting something similar.

This study suggests that encouraging women to find a personal trainer would be another wonderful tool to improve their exercise compliance.

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