The Relationship Between Barriers to Physical Activity and Depressive Symptoms in Community-Dwelling Women.

IF 1.6 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Women's health reports (New Rochelle, N.Y.) Pub Date : 2024-03-13 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1089/whr.2023.0034
Caroline A Figueroa, Adrian Aguilera, Thomas J Hoffmann, Yoshimi Fukuoka
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Abstract

Background: Women are less physically active, report greater perceived barriers for exercise, and show higher levels of depressive symptoms. This contributes to high global disability. The relationship between perceived barriers for physical activity and depressive symptoms in women remains largely unexplored. The aims of this cross-sectional analysis were to examine the association between physical activity barriers and depressive symptoms, and identify types of barriers in physically inactive community-dwelling women.

Methods: Three hundred eighteen physically inactive women aged 25-65 years completed the Barriers to Being Active Quiz (BBAQ) developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale at the baseline visit of the mobile phone-based physical activity education trial. The BBAQ consists of six subscales (lack of time, social influence, lack of energy, lack of willpower, fear of injury, lack of skill, and lack of resources). We used multivariate regression analyses, correcting for sociodemographics.

Results: Higher physical activity barriers were associated with greater depressive symptoms scores (linear effect, estimate = 0.75, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.39-1.12, p < 0.001). This effect appeared to taper off for the higher barrier scores (quadratic effect, estimate: -0.02, 95% CI: -0.03 to -0.01, p = 0.002). Exploratory analyses indicated that these associations were most driven by the social influence (p = 0.027) and lack of energy subscales (p = 0.017).

Conclusions: Higher depression scores were associated with higher physical activity barriers. Social influence and lack of energy were particularly important barriers. Addressing these barriers may improve the efficacy of physical activity interventions in women with higher depressive symptoms. Future research should assess this in a randomized controlled trial.

Trial registration clinicaltrialsgov#: NCTO1280812 registered January 21, 2011.

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社区居住妇女的体育锻炼障碍与抑郁症状之间的关系。
背景:女性较少参加体育锻炼,在运动方面遇到的障碍较多,抑郁症状也较严重。这也是导致全球残疾率居高不下的原因之一。女性在体育锻炼中感知到的障碍与抑郁症状之间的关系在很大程度上仍未得到研究。这项横断面分析的目的是研究体育锻炼障碍与抑郁症状之间的关系,并确定不参加体育锻炼的社区女性的障碍类型:318 名 25-65 岁的非体育锻炼女性在基于手机的体育锻炼教育试验的基线访问中完成了由美国疾病控制和预防中心开发的 "体育锻炼障碍测验"(BBAQ)和流行病学研究中心的抑郁量表。BBAQ 包括六个分量表(缺乏时间、社会影响、缺乏能量、缺乏意志力、害怕受伤、缺乏技能和缺乏资源)。我们使用多元回归分析法对社会人口统计学进行了校正:结果:体育锻炼障碍越大,抑郁症状得分越高(线性效应,估计值 = 0.75,95% 置信区间 [CI]:0.39-1.12,P<0.05):0.39-1.12,P = 0.002)。探索性分析表明,社会影响(p = 0.027)和缺乏能量(p = 0.017)对这些关联的影响最大:结论:抑郁评分越高,体育锻炼障碍越大。结论:抑郁分数越高,体育锻炼障碍越大。消除这些障碍可能会提高体育锻炼干预措施对抑郁症状较重女性的效果。未来的研究应在随机对照试验中对此进行评估。试验注册 clinicaltrialsgov#: NCTO1280812 注册于 2011 年 1 月 21 日。
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CiteScore
1.30
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0.00%
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审稿时长
18 weeks
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