| Literature DB >> 27293882 |
Amanda Baker1, Héloïse Sirois-Leclerc1, Heather Tulloch2.
Abstract
Physical activity interventions have recently become a popular strategy to help postmenopausal women prevent and manage obesity. The current systematic review evaluates the efficacy of physical activity interventions among overweight and obese postmenopausal women and sheds light on the behavioral change techniques that were employed in order to direct future research. Method. Five electronic databases were searched to identify all prospective RCT studies that examine the impact of physical activity on adiposity indicators, physical capacity, and/or mental health outcomes among healthy, sedentary overweight, and obese postmenopausal women in North America. The behavior change technique taxonomy was used to identify the various strategies applied in the programs. Results. Five RCTs met the inclusion criteria. The findings showed that adiposity indicators and physical capacity outcomes significantly improved following long-term interventions; however, mental health outcomes showed nonsignificant changes. Furthermore, 17 behavior change techniques were identified with the taxonomy across all trials. The intrapersonal-level techniques were the most common. Conclusion. Physical activity interventions had a positive effect on adiposity measures and physical capacity. Future research should focus on testing the effectiveness of physical activity interventions on mental health and incorporate strategies at the individual and environmental level to maximize the health impact on the population.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27293882 PMCID: PMC4884891 DOI: 10.1155/2016/6169890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1The progressive flow of the study exclusion process.
Study descriptions and summary of results: randomized controlled trials in North American populations.
| Study acronym and source | Recruitment | Population | Duration, months | Number of subjects | Intervention and control description | Intervention details | Outcome variables | Results |
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| Bowen et al., 2006 [ | Mass mailings and media placements (American) | 50–75 years, otherwise healthy, sedentary, BMI ≥ 25, women after menopause | 12 | 173 | PA intervention: 45 min of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise 5 days/week (incl. walking, bicycling, and aerobics). Participants attended at least three mandatory training sessions held at the facility supervised by an exercise psychologist for months 1–3. The remaining two sessions were to be done at home. | Daily activity log to record type of exercise, duration, peak heart rate, and rating of perceived exertion for all sport and recreational activities. | Anxiety and depression: subscales from the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI). | No significant difference in mental health at 12 months between groups. |
| Campbell et al., 2010 [ | Maximal O2 uptake (cardiorespiratory fitness) measured with treadmill test. | Exercisers significantly increased in maximal fitness compared to control group ( | ||||||
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| Foster-Schubert et al., 2012 [ | Mass mailing campaigns, media publicity, or community outreach prompted calls (American) | 50–75 years, otherwise healthy, sedentary, BMI ≥ 25, women after menopause | 12 | 204 (PA-only and control group) | PA intervention: 45 min of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise 5 days/week (walking/hiking, bicycling, and aerobics). Participants attended at least three mandatory training sessions held at the facility and supervised by an exercise psychologist. These sessions included use of treadmill, stationary bike, and other aerobic machines. The remaining two sessions were to be done at home. | Activity log to record type of exercise, duration, peak heart rate, and rating of perceived exertion. | Anthropometry: body weight waist circumference | Among exercisers, body weight decreased significantly ( |
| Imayama et al., 2011 [ | Mass mailings and media placements (American) | Maximal fitness measured with treadmill test. | Maximal fitness increased significantly in exercisers compared to controls after the 12 months ( | |||||
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Church et al., 2007 [ | Ads in newspaper, radio, television, community events, and mass mail (American) | 45–75 years, otherwise healthy, sedentary, BMI 25–43, women after menopause | 6 | 464 | PA intervention group 1: participants attended 4 training sessions/week which included cycling and treadmill expending 4 kilocalories per kilogram of body weight per week. Energy expenditure level is about 50%. | Trainers documented progress. | Pedometer measures steps/day. | After the 6 months, there were no significant differences on steps per day across all the groups. |
| Martin et al., 2009 [ | Ads in local community and team recruitment in minorities communities (American) | 430 | Quality of life (QOL): | A significant dose-response effect of exercise on QOL was found for 3 of 4 subscales of physical health (i.e., physical functioning, role limitations due to physical problems, and general health perception) and 4 of 4 scales of mental health (role limitations due to emotional problems, social functioning, vitality, and mental health). | ||||
| Sisson et al., 2009 [ | Ads in local community and team recruitment in community (American) | 464 | Maximal O2 uptake (cardiorespiratory fitness) measured with cycling test. | A significant difference in maximal aerobic fitness was found for all pairwise treatment group comparisons except 4 kcal per kg/week versus 8 kcal per kg/week. | ||||
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| Gabriel et al., 2011 [ | Direct mailing from selected ZIP codes (American) | 52–62 years, otherwise healthy, sedentary, BMI 25–39.9, women after menopause | 48 | 508 | Intervention: 150 minutes per week of moderate-intensity activity similar to brisk walking. Participant contact was extensive and included 40 group visits in first year, 12 monthly visits in years 2 and 3, and no visits in year 4. Visits included a 400-meter walk as fast as possible and physical activity follow-up questionnaire | Evaluated at 6 months and then annually using 400-meter walk test and MAQ interview-administered questionnaire by specialists. | 400-meter walk: 10 laps along a hallway with cones set 20 m apart at a pace that could be maintained the whole duration. | The exercise group had significantly lower 400-meter walk times compared to the control group ( |
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| Friedenreich et al., 2011 [ | Targeted mailings, posters, brochures, and media campaigns (Canadian) | 50–74 years, otherwise healthy, sedentary, BMI 22–40, women after menopause | 12 | 320 | Intervention: participants were instructed to complete 45 min of moderate-to-vigorous intensity aerobic exercise 5 days/week. Within the first 3 months, subjects gradually worked up to 70–80% of their heart rate reserve and then remained at 70–80%. Three mandatory sessions/week were held at the facility with specialized trainers. The remaining 2 sessions were home-based. A warm-up and cool-down of 5–10 minutes were encouraged and carried out at the facility training sessions. | Daily exercise log and Polar HR monitors. | Maximal fitness was measured with a treadmill test. | Maximal fitness increased significantly more in exercisers compared to controls ( |
Physical activity descriptions and means.
| Study | Aerobics activity | Average minutes of physical activity per week | Average heart rate |
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| PATH | Cycling, walking, aerobics, and some resistance training | 171.3 | 60–70 |
| NEW | Cycling, walking, and aerobics | 225 | 80 |
| ALPHA | Cycling, walking, and aerobics | 178.5 | 62.2 |
| DREW | |||
| Low dose | Cycling and walking | 72.2 | 55.1 |
| Moderate dose | Cycling and walking | 135.8 | 76.2 |
| High dose | Cycling and walking | 191.7 | 80.7 |
| WOMAN | Fast walking | 150 | — |
Details of the analyses and results per RCT.
| Intervention | Authors | Type of analysis | Outcome variables | Results |
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| PATH | Bowen et al., 2006 [ | Between-group analyses | Perceived stress |
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| Anxiety |
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| Depression |
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| General mental health |
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| Physical functioning | Significantly improved among intervention group compared to control group | |||
| Social support: emotional |
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| Social support: affection | Significantly higher for the control group compared to the exercisers | |||
| Social support: tangible |
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| Social support: overall |
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| Within-group analyses | Perceived stress |
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| Anxiety |
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| Depression | (i) No significant difference between baseline and 12-month follow-up for intervention group | |||
| General mental health | (i) Significantly improved between baseline and 12-month follow-up for intervention group | |||
| Physical functioning | (i) No significant difference between baseline and 12-month follow-up for intervention group | |||
| Social support: emotional |
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| Social support: affection | (i) No significant difference between baseline and 12-month follow-up for intervention group | |||
| Social support: tangible |
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| Social support: overall |
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| Campbell et al., 2010 [ | Between-group analyses | VO2 max | Significantly increased by 13.6% compared to the 0.2% increase in the control group | |
| Body weight | Significantly decreased by 1.3 kg compared to the 0.3 kg decrease in the control group | |||
| Percent of body fat | Significantly decreased by 1.4% compared to the 0.1% decrease in the control group | |||
| Intra-abdominal fat | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Subcutaneous fat | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Lean body mass |
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| NEW | Foster-Schubert et al., 2012 [ | Between-group analyses | Pedometer steps | Significantly increased by 42% compared to the control group |
| VO2 max | Significantly increased by 9% compared to the control group | |||
| Body weight | Significantly decreased by 2.0 kg compared to the 0.7 kg decrease in the control group | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased by 2.0 cm compared to the 0.9 cm decrease in the control group | |||
| Percent of body fat | Significantly decreased by 1.6% compared to the control group | |||
| Lean mass |
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| Within-group analyses stratified by dose of physical activity: <154 min/wk, 154–196 min/wk, and ≥196 min/wk | Body weight | Significantly decreased for only those who did ≥196 min/wk of physical activity | ||
| BMI | Significantly decreased for only those who did ≥196 min/wk of physical activity | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased for those who did 154–196 and ≥196 min/wk of physical activity | |||
| Percent of body fat | Significantly decreased for those who did 154–196 and ≥196 min/wk of physical activity | |||
| Imayama et al., 2011 [ | Between-group analyses | Quality of life: physical functioning |
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| Quality of life: role physical |
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| Quality of life: vitality |
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| Quality of life: mental health |
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| Perceived stress |
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| Anxiety |
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| Depression |
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| Social support |
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| Within-group analyses | Perceived stress |
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| Anxiety |
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| Depression |
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| Social support |
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| DREW |
Church et al., 2007 [ | Between-group analyses | Body weight |
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| Percent of body fat |
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| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased in all intervention groups compared to the control group | |||
| Peak power output | Significantly increased in all intervention groups (7.6%, 10.7%, and 12.9%, resp.) | |||
| Peak maximal fitness | Significantly increased in all intervention groups (4.2%, 6.0%, and 8.2%, resp.) | |||
| Peak relative fitness | Significantly increased in all intervention groups (4.7%, 7.0%, and 8.5%, resp.) | |||
| Martin et al., 2009 [ | Between-group analyses | Physical quality of life: physical functioning | Moderate and high doses of physical activity significantly improved compared to control group | |
| Physical quality of life: role limitations | Moderate and high doses of physical activity significantly improved compared to control group | |||
| Physical quality of life: bodily pain |
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| Physical quality of life: general health perceptions | All doses of intervention groups significantly improved compared to the control group | |||
| Social quality of life: social functioning | Moderate and high doses of physical activity significantly improved compared to control group | |||
| Social quality of life: role limitation | Moderate and high doses of physical activity significantly improved compared to control group | |||
| Social quality of life: vitality | All doses of intervention groups significantly improved compared to the control group | |||
| Social quality of life: mental health | All doses of intervention groups significantly improved compared to the control group | |||
| Sisson et al., 2009 [ | Between-group analysis | VO2 max | Significantly increased per pairwise comparison except the low dose versus moderate dose of physical activity | |
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| WOMAN | Gabriel et al., 2011 [ | Between-group analyses | Body weight | Significantly decreased compared to the control group |
| BMI | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Fat mass | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| 400-meter walk time | Significantly decreased compared to the control group | |||
| Within-group analyses | Body weight | Significantly decreased between baseline and 12-month follow-up | ||
| BMI | Significantly decreased between baseline and 12-month follow-up | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased between baseline and 12-month follow-up | |||
| Body fat mass | Significantly decreased between baseline and 12-month follow-up | |||
| 400-meter walk time | (i) Marginally significant decrease for intervention participants between baseline and 48-month follow-up | |||
| (ii) No change for control group participants between baseline and 48 months | ||||
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| ALPHA | Friedenreich et al., 2011 [ | Between-group analyses | Body weight | Significantly decreased by 2.3 kg compared to the 0.5 kg decrease in the control group |
| Body fat mass | Significantly decreased by 2.4 kg compared to the 0.4 kg decrease in the control group | |||
| Abdominal fat | Significantly decreased by 16.5 cm2 compared to the 9.6 cm2 decrease in the control group | |||
| Waist circumference | Significantly decreased by 2.2 cm compared to the 0.1 cm decrease in the control group | |||
| Lean body mass |
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| VO2 max | Significantly increased by 14.2% compared to the 2.6% increase in the control group | |||
The behavior change technique taxonomy applied to the selected randomized controlled trials.
| Taxonomy | Behavioral change technique applied in intervention | RCT |
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| Instructions on how to perform a behavior | Demonstrate equipment | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
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| Modelling of behavior | Demonstrate equipment | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
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| Others monitoring the behavior with awareness | Review activity logs | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
| Heart rate monitor | PATH, NEW, DREW, and ALPHA | |
| Pedometer reading | DREW and WOMAN | |
| Supervised training | PATH, NEW, DREW, and ALPHA | |
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| Self-monitoring of behavior | Activity log | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
| Pedometer reading | DREW and WOMAN | |
| Heart rate monitor | PATH, NEW, DREW, and ALPHA | |
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| Feedback on behavior | follow-up on activity logs | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
| Provide information about calories to burn | DREW | |
| Information sessions | WOMAN | |
| Feedback on progress | WOMAN | |
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| Biofeedback | Heart rate monitor | PATH, NEW, DREW, and ALPHA |
| Pedometer reading | DREW and WOMAN | |
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| Social rewards | Triannual activities like hiking | PATH |
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| Material rewards | Water bottles | PATH |
| Money | DREW | |
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| Other incentives | Not identified | ALPHA |
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| Goal setting behavior | Individual meetings to discuss goals | PATH and ALPHA |
| Group meetings to discuss goals | NEW | |
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| Goal setting outcome | Individual meetings to discuss goals | PATH and ALPHA |
| Group meetings to discuss goals | NEW | |
| Target to meet dose of physical activity | DREW | |
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| Reviewing behavior goals | Feedback on progress toward goals | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
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| Discrepancy between current behavior and goal standard | Phone meetings to ensure adherence | PATH and ALPHA |
| Individual face-to-face meetings to ensure adherence | PATH and ALPHA | |
| Group meetings to ensure adherence | NEW | |
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| Social support practical | Follow-up regarding activity logs | PATH, NEW, and ALPHA |
| Provide information about calories to burn | DREW | |
| General feedback on progress | PATH, NEW, DREW, WOMAN, and ALPHA | |
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| Social support general | Phone meetings | PATH and ALPHA |
| Individual face-to-face meetings | PATH and ALPHA | |
| Group meetings | NEW | |
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| Problem solving coping planning | Discuss how to conquer barriers | NEW |
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| Commitment | Asked to devote time and effort for duration of intervention | PATH, NEW, DREW, WOMAN, and ALPHA |