Overweight Women Get Active When Doctors Intervene

Overweight Women Get Active When Doctors Intervene
(Fresco Tours,CC BY 2.0)
2/28/2015
Updated:
2/23/2015

Rather than striving for more physical activity alone, overweight, middle-aged women may benefit from the assistance of their family doctors.

The results of a new trial in the Journal of General Internal Medicine show that obese, middle-aged women who participated in an exercise program based at their primary care doctor’s office were more likely to continue to exercise over several months compared with those who were self-guided.

“Women who participated in programs in their doctor’s office had a structured environment allowing them to focus on their lifestyle habits like eating and exercising, and make changes,” says Molly Conroy, associate professor of medicine, epidemiology, and clinical and translational science at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

Obesity and physical inactivity are significant risk factors for cardiovascular disease in middle-aged women.

Discussion and Exercise

The Healthy Bodies Healthy Hearts investigators enrolled 99 inactive, overweight women ages 45 through 65 at three primary care offices at UPMC Montefiore, UPMC Shadyside, and Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC.

The women were randomly separated into two groups: one in which they participated in 12 weekly sessions at their primary care physician’s office consisting of 30 minutes of discussion and 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise; and a self-guided group that received a manual for independent use.

After three months, assessments showed that the women in the interventionist-led group had significantly higher levels of physical activity, such as walking at a moderate pace, with improvements equal to about 90 minutes per week, compared to the self-guided women who improved by only about 30 minutes per week.

After a year, both groups reduced their level of activity. The self-guided participants returned to pre-intervention activity levels; however, the interventionist-led women were still more active than they had been before participation by about 60 minutes of exercise per week.

“These outcomes imply that primary care-based interventions can be very beneficial to keep sedentary women motivated for several months. Many indicated their confidence was higher and that they felt more comfortable exercising with support. Follow-up sessions could help women over the long-term,” says Conroy.

“Future efforts should focus on finding the best way to sustain that activity, using resources available in the primary care setting.”

Coauthors contributed to the study from Heartchange, Chatham University, and University of Pittsburgh. The NIH’s National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute sponsored the work.

Source: University of Pittsburgh Republished from Futurity.org under Creative Commons License 4.0.

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