An Australian Football Themed Health Behaviour Change Intervention for Men With Cardiovascular Disease is Feasible and Acceptable: Results From a Feasibility Randomised Trial

IF 2.2 4区 医学 Q2 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS Heart, Lung and Circulation Pub Date : 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.hlc.2024.03.012
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Physical activity (PA) and weight management are critical for cardiovascular disease (CVD) secondary prevention. However, PA adherence during or after cardiac rehabilitation is low. Here, we assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Australian football-themed Aussie Fans in Training (Aussie-FIT) program and associated trial procedures when adapted for men with CVD.

Method

A pragmatic randomised control trial, with waitlist control arm, and follow-up measures at 3 and 6 months. Men with a CVD diagnosis and body mass index ≥25 kg/m2 were recruited from community and clinical settings, and randomised, following baseline measures of health and health behaviours. The intervention arm attended 12 face-to-face football-themed education and PA sessions. Feasibility (recruitment, retention, attendance, and adherence to trial procedures) was assessed via mixed methods.

Results

A total of 74% (64/86) of participants expressing interest met the eligibility criteria. Of those, 49 men (mean age=61.4, standard deviation=9.5, mean body mass index=31.3, standard deviation=4.2) were randomised. Program attendance rates (87% attended ≥80% of sessions) and retention (92%) were high. Trial retention at the primary end point (3 months) was high (86%) and at the 6-month follow-ups reduced to 67%. Program and trial procedures were acceptable, except for the request to visit a pathologist for the blood draw.

Conclusions

Using a football theme and setting may be a feasible way to engage men with CVD in health behaviour change. Given the existing pilot evidence for men at risk of CVD, and that recruitment rates were under the target, trialling a program for men with or at risk of CVD is recommended.

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针对男性心血管疾病患者的澳式足球主题健康行为改变干预是可行且可接受的:可行性随机试验的结果。
背景:体力活动(PA)和体重管理对于心血管疾病(CVD)的二级预防至关重要。然而,在心脏康复期间或康复后坚持体育锻炼的人数很少。在此,我们评估了以澳大利亚足球为主题的 "澳大利亚球迷训练(Aussie-FIT)"计划的可行性和可接受性,以及适用于男性心血管疾病患者的相关试验程序:方法:一项实用随机对照试验,设有候补对照组,并在 3 个月和 6 个月时进行随访。从社区和临床环境中招募确诊患有心血管疾病且体重指数≥25 kg/m2的男性,在对其健康状况和健康行为进行基线测量后对其进行随机分组。干预组参加了 12 次面对面的足球主题教育和体育锻炼课程。通过混合方法评估了可行性(招募、保留、出席和遵守试验程序):共有 74% 的参与者(64/86)符合资格标准。其中,49 名男性(平均年龄=61.4,标准差=9.5,平均体重指数=31.3,标准差=4.2)被随机选中。项目出席率(87%的人出席了≥80%的课程)和保留率(92%)都很高。在主要终点(3 个月)的试验保留率很高(86%),而在 6 个月的随访中,保留率降至 67%。除了要求去病理学家那里抽血外,计划和试验程序都是可以接受的:结论:以足球为主题和环境可能是让男性心血管疾病患者改变健康行为的可行方法。鉴于现有针对有心血管疾病风险的男性的试验证据,以及招募率低于目标值,建议针对有心血管疾病或有心血管疾病风险的男性试行一项计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Heart, Lung and Circulation
Heart, Lung and Circulation CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
3.80%
发文量
912
审稿时长
11.9 weeks
期刊介绍: Heart, Lung and Circulation publishes articles integrating clinical and research activities in the fields of basic cardiovascular science, clinical cardiology and cardiac surgery, with a focus on emerging issues in cardiovascular disease. The journal promotes multidisciplinary dialogue between cardiologists, cardiothoracic surgeons, cardio-pulmonary physicians and cardiovascular scientists.
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