| Literature DB >> 26400462 |
Bente Skovsby Toft1,2, Lisbeth Uhrenfeldt3,4.
Abstract
The aim is to identify facilitators and barriers for physical activity (PA) experienced by morbidly obese adults in the Western world. Inactivity and a sedentary lifestyle have become a major challenge for health and well-being, particularly among persons with morbid obesity. Lifestyle changes may lead to long-term changes in activity level, if facilitators and barriers are approached in a holistic way by professionals. To develop lifestyle interventions, the perspective and experiences of this group of patients are essential for success. The methodology of the systematic review followed the seven-step procedure of the Joanna Briggs Institute and was published in a protocol. Six databases were searched using keywords and index terms. Manual searches were performed in reference lists and in cited citations up until March 2015. The selected studies underwent quality appraisal in the Joanna Briggs-Qualitative Assessment and Review Instrument. Data from primary studies were extracted and were subjected to a hermeneutic text interpretation and a data-driven coding in a five-step procedure focusing on meaning and constant targeted comparison through which they were categorized and subjected into a meta-synthesis. Eight papers were included for the systematic review, representing the experiences of PA among 212 participants. One main theme developed from the meta-data analysis: "Identity" with the three subthemes: "considering weight," "being able to," and "belonging with others." The theme and subthemes were merged into a meta-synthesis: "Homecoming: a change in identity." The experiences of either suffering or well-being during PA affected the identity of adults with morbid obesity either by challenging or motivating them. A change in identity may be needed to feel a sense of "homecoming" when active.Entities:
Keywords: Physical activity; body image; identity; interpersonal relations; morbid obesity; qualitative research; self-efficacy
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26400462 PMCID: PMC4580712 DOI: 10.3402/qhw.v10.28577
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being ISSN: 1748-2623
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart of inclusion process (Moher, Liberati, Tetzlaff, & Altman, 2009).
Meta-summary of included studies.
| Author (year) country | Aim/objective | Sample ( | Data analysis method | Context | Author's conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baruth ( | To explore perceptions and experiences with barriers to exercise and healthy eating among women from predominantly African American disadvantaged neighborhoods. | Females ( | Transcripts, codes, and identification of key themes. | Disadvantaged neighborhoods, South Carolina. | Individual, social, and environmental factors were frequently mentioned as barriers to exercise and healthy eating. Insults from strangers about their body size and feelings of intimidation and embarrassment about not being able to complete exercises due to their body size were described as barriers to exercise. |
|
Christiansen ( | To gain more knowledge about characteristics of eating habits and body image as well as motivational forces for change. | Females ( | “Bricolage,” hermeneutic interpretation. | 40-h weight reduction course in a patient education resource center. | Seeing oneself as an obese person was a gradual process that implied experiencing oneself as different from others. To experience a gap between knowing and doing concerning food habits in everyday life indicated that informants valued that they had a choice. |
|
Dahl ( | To describe how personnel argued for and perceived a residential weight-loss program, to investigate how the participants experienced the program, and to contrast these perspectives. | Females ( | Interview transcripts and field notes were inductive and thematically analysed together. | 18-week on-site residential program at a weight-loss center in Denmark. | Participants embraced and adapted to the exercise part of the program. However, the personnel claimed that social training and personal development was necessary to lose weight, and weight to maintenance was not supported by all participants. |
|
Lewis ( | To investigate obese men's health behaviors and strategies for change. | Females ( | Constant comparative methods of analysis. Transcripts, codes, and identification of themes. | Everyday life in community. | Men were found to feel a personal responsibility for weight gain. PA was seen as an empowering option, but difficult to fit into daily lives. Causes of weight gain and barriers to weight loss were sedentary lifestyles, stress, lack of work life balance, and weight-based stigma. |
|
Groven ( | To show how high-intensity training was experienced from a first-person perspective. | Females ( | Kvale and Brinkman: transcribed, “bricolage,” meaning condensation; thematizing central themes, meaning interpretation. | Group-based treatment program. | Experiences of training were connected to the participants’ general experiences of being overweight. |
|
Guess ( | To examine the views and attitudes toward aerobic and resistance exercise among overweight and obese individuals. | Females ( | Thematic analysis of transcribed data (NVIVO8). | 12-week aerobic or resistance exercise program in a weight management clinic in London. | Weight loss was found as primary motivation for PA participation among women. Existing knowledge need to be reconciled to a successful weight loss and maintenance due to PA as participants had only little awareness or experience of resistance exercise and were fearful of potential risks. |
| Thomas ( | To explore the extent to which people living with obesity have attempted to lose weight; their attitudes toward dieting, physical exercise and weight-loss solutions. | Females ( | Constant continuous, comparative method. | Urban and rural areas in Victoria, Australia. | Very few individuals with obesity were given appropriate long-term guidance or support. The positive role of social networks seemed particularly important in engaging individuals in PA. |
|
Wiklund ( | To describe how adults with severe obesity, awaiting gastric bypass surgery experience PA. | Females ( | 7 Steps of Dahlgren and Fallsberg. | Hospital and home setting. | PA was experienced positively, but obstacles exist that influence the capacity or the will of the people living with severe obesity. Support is necessary to maintain PA. |
Coherence between meta-synthesis, theme, and subthemes in the review.
| Meta-synthesis | Homecoming: a change in identity | ||
| Main theme | Identity—a sense of self | ||
| Subthemes | Considering weight | Being able to | Belonging with others |