Exploring the Perceived Difficulty and Importance of Lower Limb Physical Activities for People With and Without Osteoarthritis: A Discrete Choice Experiment.

IF 1.5 Q3 RHEUMATOLOGY Musculoskeletal Care Pub Date : 2024-12-01 DOI:10.1002/msc.70011
Andrés Pierobon, Will Taylor, Richard Siegert, Robin Willink, Kim Bennell, Kelli Allen, Jackie Whittaker, Jake Pearson, Marrissa Norton, Jane Clark, Hilal Ata Tay, Dieuwke Schiphof, Ben Darlow
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Abstract

Background: Many outcome measures used in lower-limb osteoarthritis (OA) present ceiling effects. This compromises the ability of those measures to accurately assess people with higher levels of physical function. Understanding of the difficulty and importance of physical activities would enable the inclusion of challenging and meaningful activities in new outcome measures.

Purpose: To explore the perceived difficulty and importance of 40 physical activities by people with and without lower limb OA.

Methods: We conducted a discrete choice experiment (DCE) using 1000minds software. We recruited people with and without OA using OA databases and social media. Participants were asked to complete two comparison tasks, first about the relative difficulty and then about the importance of the physical activities. Pairwise comparisons were presented (i.e., two alternatives at a time), and participants selected the most difficult/important.

Results: We analysed data from 613 participants, of whom 215 had OA. Rankings of difficulty and importance were obtained. No major differences existed in the difficulty ranking between people with and without OA. People with OA rated activities like kneeling and balancing activities as more important than those without OA. In contrast, people without OA rated jogging, squatting, and running as more important than those with OA. Challenging activities were generally rated as less important.

Conclusions: A DCE ranked 40 different lower limb physical activities in terms of difficulty and importance. Challenging activities were found to be less important than easier ones. People with OA gave more importance to easier activities than people without OA.

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探索有或无骨关节炎患者下肢运动的感知难度和重要性:一个离散选择实验。
背景:用于下肢骨关节炎(OA)的许多结局指标都存在天花板效应。这损害了这些测量准确评估身体机能水平较高的人的能力。了解体育活动的难度和重要性将有助于在新的结果衡量指标中纳入具有挑战性和有意义的活动。目的:探讨下肢OA患者和非下肢OA患者对40项体育活动的感知难度和重要性。方法:采用1000minds软件进行离散选择实验(DCE)。我们通过OA数据库和社交媒体招募了有OA和没有OA的人。参与者被要求完成两项比较任务,首先是相对难度,然后是体育活动的重要性。两两比较(即一次有两个选择),参与者选择最困难/最重要的。结果:我们分析了613名参与者的数据,其中215名患有OA。获得了难度和重要性的排名。OA患者和非OA患者在难度排序上无显著差异。患有OA的人认为跪地和平衡活动比没有OA的人更重要。相比之下,没有OA的人认为慢跑、下蹲和跑步比OA患者更重要。具有挑战性的活动通常被认为不那么重要。结论:DCE对40种不同的下肢体力活动的难度和重要性进行了排序。研究发现,具有挑战性的活动不如容易的活动重要。患有OA的人比没有OA的人更重视简单的活动。
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来源期刊
Musculoskeletal Care
Musculoskeletal Care RHEUMATOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
88
期刊介绍: Musculoskeletal Care is a peer-reviewed journal for all health professionals committed to the clinical delivery of high quality care for people with musculoskeletal conditions and providing knowledge to support decision making by professionals, patients and policy makers. This journal publishes papers on original research, applied research, review articles and clinical guidelines. Regular topics include patient education, psychological and social impact, patient experiences of health care, clinical up dates and the effectiveness of therapy.
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