TY - JOUR
T1 - Evaluating the effectiveness of physician counseling to promote physical activity in Mexico
T2 - an effectiveness-implementation hybrid study
AU - Galaviz, Karla I.
AU - Estabrooks, Paul A.
AU - Ulloa, Edtna Jauregui
AU - Lee, Rebecca
AU - Janssen, Ian
AU - López y Taylor, Juan
AU - Ortiz-Hernández, Luis
AU - Lévesque, Lucie
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding information This work was conducted with the financial support of a grant (CIHR GIR 127075) from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Institute of Population and Public Health, the CIHR Institute of Cancer Research and the Public Health Agency of Canada–—Chronic Disease Prevention Branch.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017, Society of Behavioral Medicine.
PY - 2017/12/1
Y1 - 2017/12/1
N2 - Integrating physical activity (PA) counseling in routine clinical practice remains a challenge. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of a pragmatic strategy aimed to improve physician PA counseling and patient PA. An effectiveness-implementation type-2 hybrid design was used to evaluate a 3-h training (i.e., implementation strategy-IS) to increase physician use of the 5-As (assess, advise, agree, assist, arrange) for PA counseling (i.e., clinical intervention-CI) and to determine if the CI improved patient PA. Patients of trained and untrained physicians reported on PA and quality of life pre-post intervention. Medical charts (N = 1700) were examined to assess the proportion of trained physicians that used the 5-As. The RE-AIM framework informed our evaluation. 305/322 of eligible physicians participated in the IS (M age = 40 years, 52% women) and 683/730 of eligible patients in the CI (M age = 49 years, 77% women). The IS was adopted by all state regions and cost ~ $20 Mexican pesos (US$1) per provider trained. Physician adoption of any of the 5-As improved from pre- to post-training (43 vs. 52%, p < .01), with significant increases in the use of assessment (43 vs. 52%), advising (25 vs. 39%), and assisting with barrier resolution (7 vs. 15%), but not in collaborative goal setting (13 vs. 17%) or arranging for follow-up (1 vs. 1%). Patient PA and quality of life did not improve. The IS intervention was delivered with high fidelity at a low cost, but appears to be insufficient to lead to broad adoption of the CI.
AB - Integrating physical activity (PA) counseling in routine clinical practice remains a challenge. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the implementation and effectiveness of a pragmatic strategy aimed to improve physician PA counseling and patient PA. An effectiveness-implementation type-2 hybrid design was used to evaluate a 3-h training (i.e., implementation strategy-IS) to increase physician use of the 5-As (assess, advise, agree, assist, arrange) for PA counseling (i.e., clinical intervention-CI) and to determine if the CI improved patient PA. Patients of trained and untrained physicians reported on PA and quality of life pre-post intervention. Medical charts (N = 1700) were examined to assess the proportion of trained physicians that used the 5-As. The RE-AIM framework informed our evaluation. 305/322 of eligible physicians participated in the IS (M age = 40 years, 52% women) and 683/730 of eligible patients in the CI (M age = 49 years, 77% women). The IS was adopted by all state regions and cost ~ $20 Mexican pesos (US$1) per provider trained. Physician adoption of any of the 5-As improved from pre- to post-training (43 vs. 52%, p < .01), with significant increases in the use of assessment (43 vs. 52%), advising (25 vs. 39%), and assisting with barrier resolution (7 vs. 15%), but not in collaborative goal setting (13 vs. 17%) or arranging for follow-up (1 vs. 1%). Patient PA and quality of life did not improve. The IS intervention was delivered with high fidelity at a low cost, but appears to be insufficient to lead to broad adoption of the CI.
KW - Behavior change
KW - Lifestyle medicine
KW - RE-AIM
KW - Translation research
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U2 - 10.1007/s13142-017-0524-y
DO - 10.1007/s13142-017-0524-y
M3 - Article
C2 - 28936694
AN - SCOPUS:85034785260
SN - 1869-6716
VL - 7
SP - 731
EP - 740
JO - Translational behavioral medicine
JF - Translational behavioral medicine
IS - 4
ER -