| Literature DB >> 21052533 |
Riccardo Dalle Grave1, Simona Calugi, Elena Centis, Marwan El Ghoch, Giulio Marchesini.
Abstract
Physical activity plays a major role in the development and management of obesity. High levels of physical activity provide an advantage in maintaining energy balance at a healthy weight, but the amount of exercise needed to produce weight loss and weight loss maintenance may be difficult to achieve in obese subjects. Barriers to physical activity may hardly be overcome in individual cases, and group support may make the difference. The key role of cognitive processes in the failure/success of weight management suggests that new cognitive procedures and strategies should be included in the traditional behavioral treatment of obesity, in order to help patients build a mindset of long-term weight control. We reviewed the role of physical activity in the management of obesity, and the principal cognitive-behavioral strategies to increase adherence to exercise. Also in this area, we need to move from the traditional prescriptive approach towards a multidisciplinary intervention.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21052533 PMCID: PMC2968119 DOI: 10.1155/2011/348293
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Recommendations for physical activity in the management of obesity [13].
| Evidence statements and recommendations on PA for weight loss and WL maintenance | Level of evidence | Evidence statements and recommendations on combined therapy (Diet + PA) for WL and WL maintenance | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| (i) PA in overweight or obese adults results in modest WL independent of the effect of caloric restriction through diet | A | (i) The combination of a reduced calorie diet and increased PA produces greater WL than diet alone or PA alone | A |
| (ii) PA in overweight or obese adults modestly reduces abdominal fat | B | (ii) The combination of a reduced calorie diet and increased PA produces greater reductions in abdominal fat than either diet alone or PA alone, although it has not been shown to be independent of WL | B |
| (iii) PA in overweight or obese adults modestly increases cardio-respiratory fitness independent of WL | A | (iii) A combination of a reduced calorie diet and increased PA improves cardiorespiratory fitness as measured by VO2max when compared to diet alone | A |
| A | |||
| (i) modestly contributes to WL in overweight and obese adults | A | ||
| (ii) may decrease abdominal fat | B | ||
| (iii) increases cardiorespiratory fitness | A | ||
| (iv) may help maintenance of WL | C | ||
PA, physical activity; WL, weight loss.
Main reasons for not engaging in physical activity reported by obese subjects during group sessions in our Unit, and possible strategies to increase motivation and adherence.
| Reasons for not exercising | Barriers | Strategies to increase adherence |
|---|---|---|
| “I would like to exercise, but I feel immediately tired and breathless, and my knees hurt” | Low fitness, pain | Exercising with individuals having the same limits, to reduce the intensity of exercise |
| “I do not like exercising, it is boring” | Boredom, lack of stimuli | Planning enjoyable activities or amusing exercising (e.g., group dancing or walking) |
| “I do not like exercising alone, but when I go walking with friends I realize that I slow down the group, which makes me feel inadequate” | Comparison with other individuals | Exercising with subjects having similar problems, in order to avoid competition |
| “Exercising in a gym or a swimming pool or even walking in a public garden makes me feel ashamed, observed, judged, mocked at” | Body image dissatisfaction | Arranging a protected environment, and specific courses (gym or swimming pool) for obese persons |
| “I'd like to exercise, but I have no time. Back from work, I am too tired and I have to take care of my family” | Time constraints | Reorganizing daily activities fitting exercise as a priority. Turning everyday activities into exercise (using stairs, walking to work, etc.) |
| “The weather was horrible; I had to stay at home” | Weather constraint | Planning short walk in small groups; reducing objectives but maintaining change and adherence |
| “I feel so bad when I exercise, that I feel as if I am going to die” | Death fear | Increasing goals very slowly, to avoid any sense of breathlessness |
Most patients report difficulties in engaging in physical activity and in the maintenance of behavior changes. In general, patients underline the importance of low goal setting, new stimuli, social support, and long-term contact with therapists.