| Literature DB >> 25062944 |
Marie L Dacey1, Mary A Kennedy2, Rani Polak3, Edward M Phillips4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite a large evidence base to demonstrate the health benefits of regular physical activity (PA), few physicians incorporate PA counseling into office visits. Inadequate medical training has been cited as a cause for this. This review describes curricular components and assesses the effectiveness of programs that have reported outcomes of PA counseling education in medical schools.Entities:
Keywords: counseling; exercise; medical school education; physical activity; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25062944 PMCID: PMC4111877 DOI: 10.3402/meo.v19.24325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for systematic review of the literature
| Category | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Medical school students of any year from any medical school in the world | Medical trainees post medical school Qualified healthcare professionals Students of other healthcare professions (e.g., dieticians, nurses) |
| Interventions | Educational interventions that have components that address physical activity counseling, including (but not restricted to):
exercise prescription knowledge providers’ personal exercise/behaviors counseling/coaching strategies for PA | Educational interventions that do not have a component that addresses physical activity counseling (e.g., understanding muscle movement, cardiac physiology) |
| Use any kind of educational methodology including (but not restricted to):
theoretical lessens role plays workshops Personal experience | ||
| Instructed by any teacher including, but not restricted to:
physician physiotherapist physiology psychology social worker fitness guide | ||
| Comparators | Studies with or without control/comparison groups | Not applicable |
| Outcome | Studies with at least one outcome measure that addresses future physical activity counseling. | Studies without any reported outcome data Studies with outcomes that do not link to future physical activity counseling |
| Study design (and study feature) | Any design (except studies without outcome measures) English language only Published 2000–2012 | Insufficient detail to determine any study content |
Fig. 1Search terms.
Fig. 2Study selection process for systematic review of physical activity counseling education in medical school.
Study design and quality of 10 programs included in systematic review
| Intervention transparency (description sufficient for replication) | Control for risk of bias | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| Source | Study design | Program | Evaluation | Baseline measures | Comparison group |
| Barss et al. ( | Post only survey | ✓ | |||
| Bass et al. ( | Before-and-after test | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Conroy et al. ( | Before-and-after survey | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Frank et al. ( | Retrospective qualitative (focus groups) | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Frank et al. ( | Interrupted time series survey (baseline, mid, end of program) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Grant et al. ( | Post only semi-structured family interviews | ||||
| Kushner et al. ( | Post only questionnaire | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Mohler et al. ( | Post only survey | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Moser et al. ( | Post only survey | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Pandejpong et al. ( | Post only medical chart comparisons and surveys | ✓ | |||
| Wagenschutz et al. ( | Post only survey including retrospective data | ✓ | ✓ | ||
Evidence of effectiveness for six measured outcomes in systematic review
| Measured outcomes | Overall evidence rating | Quality | Quantity | Consistency |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PA | ||||
| Awareness of benefits of PA | C | C | C | A |
| Change in attitude toward PA | B | B | A | A |
| Change in personal PA behaviors | C | C | A | A |
| PA counseling | ||||
| Improvements in PA counseling knowledge & skills | B | B | A | A |
| Self-efficacy to do PA counseling | B | B | A | A |
| Change in attitudes toward PA counseling | C | C | B | B |
Fig. 3Number of programs using objective vs. non-objective measures reported by outcome.
Program characteristics of 10 medical school educational interventions that address physical activity counseling skills included in a review of the literature
| Source | Program duration | Educational intervention | No. of respondents/eligible study participants | Measured outcomes and evaluation tools related to PA counseling | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Barss et al. ( | 6 months | Lifestyle curriculum addresses main national determinants of health, disease, and injury through five lectures, and home-based observational interviews with families re: family's safety, smoking, food hygiene, and health behaviors. Students also prepare and deliver oral presentations on a self-selected lifestyle topic. Assess personal lifestyle using 1 week activity and nutritional log. | 43/50 | Survey assessment of self-reported changes in awareness of benefit of exercise and improvement of counseling skills Survey assessment of self-reported changes in personal PA behaviors Survey assessment of curriculum value |
Improved awareness of benefit of exercise: 96% strongly agree/agree; Improved PA counseling skills: 100% strongly agree/agree Increased personal PA behavior: 46% started to exercise regularly; 63% started using stairs more frequently Curriculum-improved skills and stimulated interest in Community Medicine: 84% strongly agree/agree |
| Bass et al. ( | 2.5 hours | Nutrition and health promotion unit includes 2 hour interactive lecture with videos and case scenarios on PA and nutrition counseling and two 15 min simulated patient encounters to practice PA and nutrition counseling skills. | 57/115 | Assessment of changes in knowledge, self-reported confidence for PA counseling, and attitude toward utility and necessity of PA counseling | Significant improvements on case-based knowledge test, and 10-point Likert confidence scale ( No significant change in attitude re: utility and necessity of PA counseling |
| Conroy et al. ( | 14 weeks/28 hours | Preventive medicine and nutrition course consists of weekly 45 min lectures and 90 min small group problem-based tutorials with simulated cases to teach counseling skills. One week specific to exercise. Assess personal PA and nutrition | 110/137 | Survey assessment of changes in self-reported personal PA behaviors and self-efficacy for PA counseling | 18% reported course had changed exercise habits Significant improvement in self-efficacy for PA counseling on 4-point Likert scale ( |
| Frank et al. ( | 4 years | ‘Healthy-doc Healthy-patient’ project addresses disease prevention through multiple lectures and activities incorporated into existing curriculum, including personal health practices and standardized patient counseling. Optional extracurricular programs and activities support personal health practices. | 15/75 (Qualitative) | Focus groups’ input on changes in habits and attitudes related to personal health behaviors Focus groups’ input on program's impact on clinical prevention practice Focus groups’ input on curriculum quality/effectiveness | Overall positive feedback on program's influence on personal health habits and attitudes, despite limited recall of lecture about exercise 2 years later and negative feedback on program intensity. No pattern on opinions regarding utility of program in developing clinical practice skills Least favorable perceptions and recall of lectures; more positive regard for and recall of non-lecture components integrated into existing curriculum; most positive about extracurricular, student-initiated optional activities. |
| Frank et al. ( | Same program as Frank et al. ( | 106/114 (Quantitative) | Pre-, mid-, post survey assessment of changes in self-reported compliance to CDC PA recommendations Post only faculty rating of standardized patient counseling, i.e., none, minimal, more extensive |
Non-significant decrease in compliance to CDC PA recommendations mid- to post-intervention: control (64–50%), intervention (71–66%) Significant increase in frequency of
exercise counseling during standardized patient counseling ( | |
| Grant et al. ( | 9 months | Family Studies Program promotes students’ understanding of family functions and its role in health promotion and students’ communication skills through pre-placement background reading and workshops, followed by 10–12 student visits to assigned family to learn about families’ day-to-day functions and assist in development of self-management practices. | 30/30 | Nurse administered semi-structured questionnaire with families to assess their self-reported changes in exercise habits in response to program | 100% of families said knowledge of personal health issues had increased 66% of families reported positive changes in lifestyle behaviors 66% of families reported better understanding of importance of maintaining ideal weight |
| Kushner et al. ( | 6 weeks/12 hours | Behavior Change Project (BCP) within Healthy Living unit promotes students’ well-being and self-care through 6 weekly 2-hour didactic/experiential sessions on behavior change principles Students set personal goal and monitor progress in changing a self-selected health behavior | 343/343 | Survey assessment of which behavior students chose to change and goal achievement success rate. Survey assessment of attitude toward project's utility and its burden on students | 44% selected exercise among six possible health behaviors. 39% achieved exercise goal Utility of project: Average overall student score 4.0/5 on Likert scale, e.g., project was valuable, learned to be healthier. Burden of project: Average overall student score 2.8/ 5 on Likert scale, e.g., monitoring behavior was difficult and time consuming |
| Mohler et al. ( | 2 hours | Healthy Aging Rounds promotes students’ knowledge of exercise prescription, importance of social engagement, and counseling skills with older adults. Rounds include background readings and two 1-hour didactic/experiential sessions that include 20-min student/healthy older adult mentor practice counseling. | 26/37 | Survey assessment of student and mentor opinion of program quality Survey assessment of students’ change in attitude toward role of PA in aging, and importance of exercise prescription for older adults | Quality of program Good/excellent: 92% of students and 97% of mentors 85% moderately or much more positive attitude regarding role of PA and importance of exercise prescription with older adults |
| Moser et al. ( | 4 week/60 hours | Health Beliefs and Behavior course promotes understanding of health behaviors and provides counseling tools through classroom didactics, workshops, and experiential learning in clinical ambulatory setting. Students participate in self-selected behavior change exercise. | 149/150 | Survey assessment of self-reported changes in attitudes, knowledge, and counseling skills | Improvement in open-mindedness toward behavior change, understanding of health behavior principles, and ability to recommend behavior change strategies:: Average overall student score 4.2/5 on Likert scale |
| Pandejpong et al. ( | 3 months/3 sessions | Continuity of Care Clinic (CCC) to improve longitudinal cardiovascular risk management skills during Internal Medicine rotation includes patient encounters and follow-up visits under supervision of attending physicians. | 38/192 (for chart review) | Three month post-graduation medical chart audits for compliance to standard quality of care for Hypertension, Diabetes and Dyslipidemia using 12-task checklist compared performance between CCC and non-CCC program graduates Three month post-graduation survey assessment of students’ self-report of changes in confidence, understanding, and attitude toward cardiovascular risk management, and possible adaptation to personal practice Three month post-graduation survey assessment of physician supervisors comments compared CCC and non-CCC graduates’ confidence, competence, and attitude re: cardiovascular risk management | Significant difference between CCC and non-CCC graduates in ‘recommending lifestyle modifications’ ( Strongly agree/agree improved confidence (86.8%), understanding (93.7%), and attitude (84.6%) toward cardiovascular risk management, and could adapt knowledge to personal practice (83.6%) on 5-point Likert scale Strongly agree/agree CCC graduates more confident (64%), competent in patient management (64%), competent in longitudinal care (51%), and have better attitude toward cardiovascular risk management (72%) compared to non-CCC graduates on 5-point Likert scale. |
| Wagenschutz et al. ( | 1 week | Two health behavior counseling interaction programs promote tobacco cessation (TCC) and nutrition/PA (NPA) counseling skills through background reading and online interactive professional skill builder program followed by 2 (TCC & NPA) 1-hour simulated counseling sessions with feedback. | 199/~340 | Survey of self-reported changes in students’ comfort level (self-efficacy) in performing nutrition & physical activity counseling | Significant increase in comfort level in performing nutrition and PA counseling (3.79 retrospectively before intervention vs. 4.48 post-intervention on 5-point Likert scale, |