| Literature DB >> 27655373 |
Ruth Mabry1, Mohammad Javad Koohsari2,3,4,5, Fiona Bull6, Neville Owen7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The dramatic rise in Noncommunicable Diseases (NCD) in the oil-producing countries of the Arabian Peninsula is driven in part by insufficient physical activity, one of the five main contributors to health risk in the region. The aim of this paper is to review the available evidence on physical activity and sedentary behaviour for this region. Based on the findings, we prioritize an agenda for research that could inform policy initiatives with regional relevance.Entities:
Keywords: Arab; Physical activity; Sedentary behaviour
Year: 2016 PMID: 27655373 PMCID: PMC5031342 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3642-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 Flow diagram
Number of studies on physical activity and sedentary behaviour in countries of the GCC according to phase of the behavioural epidemiology framework by population group
| Phase of Behavioural Epidemiology Framework | Total Number of Studies | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical Activity | Sedentary Behaviour | Total | |||||||
| Adult | Adolescent | Children | Total | Adult | Adolescent | Children | Total | ||
| 1. Associations with Health Outcome | 29 | 11 | 2 | 29 | 8 | 10 | 3 | 18 | 43 |
| 2. Measuring Behaviours | 2 | 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |||
| 3. Prevalence and Variation | 10 | 8 | 18 | 3 | 12 | 4 | 17 | 26 | |
| 4. Correlates | 25 | 9 | 1 | 35 | 35 | ||||
| 5. Interventions | 6 | 6 | 6 | ||||||
| 6. Policy | None | ||||||||
Phases I and III studies and Phase IV studies for demographic correlates included population-based surveys that aimed to include a representative sample and used standard measures for PA; Two Phase II studies were regarding the same instrument; Phase IV studies for other correlates include all cross-sectional and qualitative studies on various supports and barriers to physical activity; Phase V studies included only those that described the intervention and reported on behaviour change due to the intervention
Studies on the associations of physical activity and sedentary behaviour with health outcomes in oil-producing countries of the Arabian Peninsula (Behavioural epidemiology framework, Phase 1)
| Lead author Country | Study design | Health Outcomes | Association | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical Activity (type) | Sedentary Behaviour (type) | |||
| Prospective Studies | ||||
| Abdi S [ | Diet and physical activity intervention (6 months) | HbA1c | −physical activity intervention) | |
| 35 adults aged 18–60 years with diabetes | ||||
| Al Saif A [ | Aerobic and anaerobic intervention (3 months) | BMI | −(Aerobic intervention) | |
| Blood Pressure | ||||
| 40 obese adults aged 18–25 years | Heart Rate | |||
| Maximum oxygen consumption | + (Aerobic intervention) | |||
| Maximum voluntary ventilation | + (Aerobic and anaerobic interventions) | |||
| Al-Eisa E [ | Exercise intervention (8 weeks) | Serum cotinine | −(Exercise intervention for both smokers and non-smokers) | |
| 150 men aged 18–55 years | Serum cortisol | |||
| Testosterone | ||||
| Mood and physical symptoms scale | −(Exercise intervention for smokers) | |||
| Free radicals | + (Exercise intervention for both smokers and non-smokers) | |||
| Al-Eisa E [ | Exercise intervention (3 weeks) | Insomnia | −(exercise intervention) | |
| 76 women university students aged 19–25 years | Depression | |||
| Attention span | + (Exercise intervention) | |||
| Alghadir AH [ | Exercise intervention (12 weeks) | BMI | −(Exercise intervention) | |
| 100 adults aged 30–60 years | Waist-Hip ratio | |||
| Serum levels of Copper, Zinc and bone-specific alkaline phosphatase | ||||
| Osteoporosis T-score | ||||
| Bone mineral density | + (Exercise intervention) | |||
| Serum levels of Calcium and Manganese | ||||
| Alghadir AH [ | Exercise intervention (4 weeks) | Salivary cortisol, lactate and testosterone levels | + (Exercise intervention) | |
| 16 men students aged 15–25 years | ||||
| Al-Ghimlas F [ | Exercise intervention (12 weeks) | Weight | −(Exercise intervention) | |
| 58 adults aged 15+ years | BMI | |||
| Waist and hip circumferences | ||||
| Diastolic blood pressure | ||||
| Resting Heart Rate | ||||
| HbA1c | ||||
| LDL cholesterol | ||||
| Body fat composition | ||||
| Peak oxygen uptake Muscular strength | + (exercise intervention) | |||
| Ardawi MM [ | Exercise intervention (8 weeks) | Serum bone-formation markers: | −(exercise intervention) | |
| 160 women aged 20–49 years | ||||
| Sclerostin | ||||
| CTX | ||||
| IGF-I | + (exercise intervention) | |||
| OC | ||||
| PINP | N (exercise intervention) | |||
| bone-ALP | ||||
| PTH | ||||
| NTX | ||||
| Kneffel Z [ | Exercise intervention (10 weeks) | Weight | −(Exercise intervention) | |
| 36 students aged 18–30 years | BMI | |||
| Body fat composition | ||||
| Diastolic blood pressure | ||||
| Rouzi AA [ | Prospective cohort (6 years) | All fragility related fractures | −(Total PA) | |
| 707 healthy post-menopausal women aged 50+ years | ||||
| Sadiya A [ | Lifestyle intervention including physical activity (12 weeks) | Weight | −(Lifestyle intervention) | |
| BMI | ||||
| 45 obese or obese with type 2 diabetes adults aged 18–50 years | Body fat composition | |||
| WC | ||||
| Fasting blood glucose | −(Lifestyle intervention for obese with diabetes) | |||
| HbA1c | ||||
| Salman RA [ | Exercise intervention (11–year) | Hypertension | −(leisure PA) | |
| 916 normotensive adults with diabetes aged 20+ years | ||||
| Tomar RH [ | Exercise intervention (12 weeks) | Glycemic control | + (exercise intervention) | |
| 24 adult men with type 2 diabetes aged 25–55 | ||||
| Cross-sectional: Adults | ||||
| Al-Daghri NM [ | Cross-sectional | Irisin levels | + (Total PA for healthy adults | |
| 164 adults aged 30–75 years | ||||
| N (total PA for adults with diabetes) | ||||
| Al-Hamdan NA [ | Cross-sectional | Hypertension | −(Work, transport and leisure PA) | |
| 4758 adults aged 15–64 years | ||||
| Al-Mahroos F [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Occupational activity) | −(TV time) |
| 2013 adults; men aged 40–59 years and women aged 50–69 years | −(Walking and cycling, significant in only men) | |||
| Almajwal MA [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA) | |
| 362 Non-Saudi hospital nurses | ||||
| Al-Nozha MM [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Leisure PA) | |
| 17,395 adults aged 30–70 years | WC | −(Leisure PA) | ||
| Al-Thani [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | N (Total PA) | |
| 2496 adults aged 18–64 years | WC | −(Total PA) | ||
| Ardawi MM [ | Cross sectional | Serum bone-formation markers: | −(Walking or exercising) | |
| 1235 women aged 20–49 years | ||||
| Sclerostin | ||||
| FSH | ||||
| CTX | ||||
| IGF-I | + (Walking or exercising) | |||
| OC | ||||
| PINP | ||||
| bone-ALP | ||||
| PTH | ||||
| E2 | ||||
| NTX | ||||
| Al-Kilani H [ | Cross-sectional | Total body fat | + (exercise and physical activity scores) | |
| 202 school students aged 18–25 years | ||||
| Basulaiman M [ | Cross-sectional | Hypercholesterolemia | N (Total PA) | N (Total TV/computer time) |
| 10735 adults aged 15+ years | ||||
| Borderline Hypercholesterolemia | N (Total PA) | + (Total TV/computer time) | ||
| El-Aty MA [ | Cross-sectional | Metabolic Syndrome | N (Total PA) | + (Total sitting time) |
| 3137 adults aged 18+ years | ||||
| El Bcheraoui C [ | Cross-sectional | Hypertension | N (Total PA) | N (Total TV/computer time) |
| 10735 adults aged 15+ years | ||||
| Borderline hypertension | + (Total PA−moderate active only) | N (Total TV/computer time) | ||
| El-Ghazali S [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA) | |
| 320 college students, 17–26 years | ||||
| Hegazy AM [ | Cross-sectional study | Lower back pain | −(Total PA) | + Prolonged sitting |
| 174 women, half with lower back pain for 3+ months (20–45 years) | ||||
| Mabry RM [ | Cross-sectional | The Metabolic Syndrome | −(Work PA) | + (total sedentary behavior but not significant after further adjustment for PA) |
| 1,335 adults age 20 years and older | −(Transport PA) | |||
| N (Leisure PA) | ||||
| Memish ZA [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA, men only) | |
| 10,735 adults 15+ years | ||||
| Moradi-Ladek M [ | Cross-sectional | Self-rated health | + (TV/computer time) | |
| 10,735 adults 15+ years | ||||
| Shah SM [ | Cross-sectional | Hypertension | −(Walking 30+ mins/day) | |
| 1,375 South Asian immigrants men 18+ years | ||||
| Tuffaha M [ | Cross-sectional | Vit. D deficiency | N (Total PA) | |
| 10,735 adults 15+ years | ||||
| Prospective: Children and adolescents | ||||
| Al Saweer A [ | Behavioural intervention including physical activity | Weight | −(Behavioural intervention) | |
| BMI | ||||
| 13 obese adolescents | ||||
| Cross-Sectional: children and adolescents | ||||
| Al Junaibi A [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | N (time spent walking, moderate activity, vigorous activity) | −(computer time in girls) |
| 1,541 students aged 6–19 years | ||||
| + (computer time in boys) | ||||
| N (time spent sitting) | ||||
| Al-Haifi AA [ | Cross-sectional | Sleep duration | N (Moderate and/or vigorous activity) | −(TV and computer time in boys) |
| 906 school students aged 14–19 years | ||||
| Al-Haifi AR [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Moderate and Vigorous PA) | N (TV and Computer time) |
| 906 school students aged 14–19 years | WC | |||
| −(Vigorous PA) | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(vigorous PA) | N (TV/screen time) |
| 2,906 school students aged 14–19 years | N (Total PA) | |||
| WtHR | −(vigorous PA) | |||
| N (Total PA) | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | Cross-sectional | Sleep duration | + (Total PA) | + (screen time) |
| 2,868 secondary-school students aged 15–19 years | ||||
| Al-Kilani H [ | Cross-sectional | Total body fat | + (exercise and physical activity scores) | |
| 202 school students aged 18–25 years | ||||
| Al-Nakeeb Y [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA and walking) | + (computer use and total TV and computer time) |
| 1,138 school students aged 15–17 years | ||||
| Al-Nuaim AA [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA) | + (sitting time) |
| 1,270 school students aged 15–19 years | WC | −(Total PA) | + (sitting time) | |
| Alqahtani N [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | −(Total PA, boys only) | −(Screen time) |
| 370 school children aged 14–19 years | ||||
| Alrashidi M [ | Cross-section | BMI | + (TV time in boys) | |
| 635 children aged 11–14 years | ||||
| Kerkadi A [ | Cross-sectional | BMI | N (Total PA) | + (TV time) |
| 900 female primary school children aged 5–14 years | ||||
| Muhairi SJ [ | Cross-sectional | Vitamin D levels | + (Total PA) | |
| 315 healthy adolescents aged 15–18 years | ||||
| Yousef S [ | Cross-sectional | Childhood behavioral problems | + (TV and Video games time) | |
| 197 school children aged 5–15 years | ||||
BMI body mass index, PA physical activity, ST sitting time, WC waist circumference, WtHr waist to hip ratio, + positive association,−inverse association N non-significant, Super-script number (s)−cross referencing to additional table (s) article in which article is included
Prevalence of physical activity and sedentary behaviour in oil-producing countries of the Arabian Peninsula (Behavioural epidemiology framework, Phase 3)
| Author Country | Sample | Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Measurement Tool | Physical Activity | Sedentary Behaviour |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 1,064 adults aged 15–78 years | IPAQ short | Men: 56.3 % | |
| Women: 65.7 % | ||||
| Total: 59.4 % | ||||
| Allam AR [ | 194 medical students | IPAQ short | Men: 36.2 % | |
| Women: 35.0 % | ||||
| Total: 35.5 % | ||||
| Al-Nozha MM [ | 17,395 adults aged 30–70 years | Validated questionnaire on Leisure time physical activity and walking | Men: 6.1 % | |
| Women: 1.9 % | ||||
| Al Thani M [ | 747 women aged 18–64 years | GPAQ | Women: 44.2 % | Mean total sitting time: |
| 183.6 ± 168.3 min/day | ||||
| Awadalla NJ [ | 1257 health professional college students | IPAQ short | Men: 43.7 % | |
| Women: 41.2 % | ||||
| Total: 42.0 % | ||||
| Banday AH [ | 106 Primary Health care Physicians aged 27–63 years | GPAQ | Total: 65.2 % | |
| Carter AO [ | 175 Medical students aged 19–27 years | Nurses’ Health Study II | Total: 67.0 % | |
| El-Aty, MA [ | 3137 adults aged 18+ years | GPAQ | Men: 68.0 % | Prevalence (6+ hrs/day): |
| Women: 59.5 % | Men: 21.5 % | |||
| Total: 63.4 % | Women: 25.6 % | |||
| Total: 23.7 % | ||||
| Khalaf A [ | 663 female university students | ATLS | Women: 62.4 % | |
| Koura MR [ | 370 women college students | GPAQ | Women: 46.8 % | |
| Mabry RM [ | 1,335 adults aged 20 years and older | GPAQ | Prevalence (3+ hrs/day): | |
| Men: 64.8 % | ||||
| Women: 37.8 % | ||||
| Total: 45.3 % | ||||
| Children and adolescents | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 2,866 school students aged 15–19 years | ATLS | Boys: 43.8 % | |
| Girls: 20.2 % | ||||
| Total: 31.5 % | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 2,908 secondary-school students aged 14–19 years | ATLS | Boys: 55.5 % | Computer/TV time >2 h/day: |
| Girls: 21.9 % | Boys: 84.0 % | |||
| Girls: 91.2 % | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 2,886 students aged 15–19 years | ATLS | Boys: 55.0 % | Computer/TV time >3 h/day: |
| Girls: 21.7 % | Boys: 69.8 % | |||
| Girls: 81.8 % | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 1,648 students aged 14–18 years | ATLS | Boys: 53.4 % | Mean computer/TV time (hrs/day): |
| Girls: 19.1 % | ||||
| Total: 36.0 % | Boys: 5.31 ± 3.1 | |||
| Girls: 5.89 ± 3.3 | ||||
| Computer/TV time >2 h/day: | ||||
| Boys: 84.2 % | ||||
| Girls: 91.6 % | ||||
| Total: 88.0 % | ||||
| Al-Hazzaa HM [ | 224 preschool children aged 3.4 to 6.4 years | unknown | Mean TV time (minutes/day): | |
| Boys: 162.4 ± 69.9 | ||||
| Girls: 147.7 ± 61.7 | ||||
| Total: 154.8 ± 66.1 | ||||
| Allafi A [ | 906 Adolescents aged 14–19 years | ATLS | Boys:70.5 % | % watch >2 h of TV/day: |
| Girls: 39.2 % | Boys: 69.7 % | |||
| Girls: 72.7 % | ||||
| % use computers >2 h/day: | ||||
| Boys: 62.1 % | ||||
| Girls: 70.0 % | ||||
| Al-Nakeeb Y [ | 2,290 school students aged 15–17 years | ATLS | Boys: 45.8 % | Mean time watching TV (hrs/day): |
| Girls: 4.5 % | ||||
| Total: 26.0 % | Boys: 2.51 | |||
| Girls: 2.61 | ||||
| Mean computer time (hrs/day): | ||||
| Boys: 2.41 | ||||
| Girls: 3.18 | ||||
| Al-Nuaim AA [ | 1,270 school students aged 15–19 years | ATLS | Boys: 44.5 % | Mean time watching TV (hrs/day): |
| Girls: 4.0 % | ||||
| Boys: 2.49 | ||||
| Girls: 2.60 | ||||
| Mean computer time (hrs/day): | ||||
| Boys: 2.43 | ||||
| Girls: 3.19 | ||||
| Farghaly NF [ | 767 students aged 7–20 years | unknown | Mean TV time (hrs/day) | |
| Total: 1.0 ± 1.0 | ||||
| Mean computer game time (hrs/day) | ||||
| Total: 0.7 ± 0.9 | ||||
| Gharib NM [ | 2,594 school children aged 6–18 years | Unknown | Mean hours of TV/Video/week: | |
| Boys: 11.5 | ||||
| Girls: 31.2 | ||||
| Mean hours of computer time/week: | ||||
| Boys: 3.3 | ||||
| Girls: 2.7 | ||||
| Kilani H [ | 802 adolescents aged 15–18 years | ATLS | Boys: 66.7 % | Mean screen time (hrs/day): |
| Girls: 23.1 % | Boys: mean 2.86 SD2.3 | |||
| Girls: mean 3.70 SD2.9 | ||||
| Mahfouz AA [ | 1,869 adolescent aged 11–19 years | CDC Adolescent Health adapted | Watched > 3 h TV/daily: | |
| Boys: 38.0 % | ||||
| Girls: 52.7 % | ||||
| Mahfouz AA [ | 2,696 adolescent school boys aged 11–19 years | Arabic version of CDC Adolescent Health Survey | Watched > 3 h TV/daily: | |
| Total: 38 % | ||||
| Musaiger AO [ | 512 girl school students aged 12–19 years | unknown | ≥3 h TV time/day: | |
| Girls: 60.9 % | ||||
| Yousef, S [ | 197 school children aged 6–10 years | Unknown | % TV viewing/Video games > 2 h/day: | |
| Total: 62.9 % | ||||
| Youssef RM [ | 439 secondary-school students aged 15–20 years | unknown | % TV time ≥3 h/day: | |
| Boys: 21.1 % | ||||
| Girls: 25.3 % | ||||
| Total: 23.2 % | ||||
| % computer ≥3 h/day: | ||||
| Boys: 26.6 % | ||||
| Girls: 31.5 % | ||||
| Total: 29.2 % | ||||
GPAQ global physical activity questionnaire, IPAQ international physical activity questionnaire, ATLS Arab teens lifestyle student questionnaire
Physical activity presented as percentage meeting recommendations: 150 min of moderate-intensity per week for adults and 60 min of moderate-intensity 7 days a week for adolescents except for Qatar which is for at least 5 days a week; Sedentary Behaviour presented as prevalence (%) or Mean sitting time; All studies were population-based surveys that aimed to include a representative sample and used standard measures for PA
Super-script number (s)−cross referencing to additional table (s) article in which article is included
Factors associated with physical activity in oil-producing countries of the Arabian Peninsula (Behavioural epidemiology framework, Phase 4)
| Correlate | Association | References |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic | ||
| Age | − | Al-Hazzaa, 2007 [ |
| + | Mabry, 2012 [ | |
| Gender (male) | + | Al-Hazzaa, 2007 [ |
| Education | − | Al-Hazzaa, 2007 [ |
| Marital Status (married) | + | Almajwal, 2015 [ |
| − | Khalaf, 2013 [ | |
| Employment (employed) | + | Mabry, 2012 [ |
| Intrapersonal | ||
| Lack of time | − | Al-Hazzaa, 2014 [ |
| Self-motivation | − | Al-Rafaee, 2001 [ |
| Perceived health | − | AboZaid, 2010 [ |
| Limited knowledge/awareness | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Consumption of fruits | + | Al-Hazzaa, 2014 [ |
| Consumption of foods high in fats/salt/sugar | + | Al-Hazzaa, 2014 [ |
| Knowledge PA is important | + | Donnelly, 2012 (Q) [ |
| Perceived skills/fitness | − | Awadalla, 2014 [ |
| Enhance appearance/muscles | + | Alsubaie, 2015 [ |
| Consumption of milk | + | Al-Hazzaa, 2014 [ |
| Consumption of vegetables | + | Al-Hazzaa, 2014 [ |
| Belief in Overweight as normal | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Attitude to changing diet | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Self efficacy | + | Al-Eisa, 2012 [ |
| Locus of control | − | Al-Otaibi, 2013 [ |
| Stage of change | + | Al-Otaibi, 2013 [ |
| Fear of criticism | − | AboZaid, 2010 [ |
| Maintain health | + | Daradkeh, 2015 [ |
| Shift duty | − | Almajwal, 2015 [ |
| Social and cultural | ||
| Norms limiting women’s mobility | − | Amin, 2010 [ |
| Norms prioritizing women’s care-taking role/limiting self-care role | − | Donnelly, 2012 (Q) [ |
| Social support | − | Al-Otaibi, 2013 [ |
| Low value of PA | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Norms promoting overeating | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Lack of role models | Berger, 2009 (Q) [ | |
| Physical Environment | ||
| Availability of physical activity facilities | − | Al-Rafaee, 2001 [ |
| Weather | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Safety | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Transportation | + | Al-Kahtani, 2015 [ |
| Population Policy Level | ||
| Ineffective health communication | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
| Limited resources (general) allocated for physical activity promotion | − | Mabry, 2013 (Q) [ |
| Ineffective PA-supportive policies in colleges | − | Berger, 2009 (Q) [ |
| Individual-based Policy Level | ||
| Lack of Time | − | Al-Doghether, 2007 [ |
| Health personnel limited knowledge/awareness of benefits of PA | − | Al-Doghether, 2007 [ |
| Limited material resources in health centres (teaching materials, guidelines) | − | Al-Ghawi, 2009 [ |
| Lack of specialty clinics at primary health care level | − | Al-Ghawi, 2009 [ |
| Limited availability of human resources (i.e., dietitians) | − | Ali, 2008 (Q) [ |
Studies for the demographic correlates included population-based surveys that aimed to include a representative sample and used standard measures for physical activity; all other studies were cross-sectional studies using various methodologies except those marked Q to denote qualitative studies
Super-script number (s)−cross referencing to additional table (s) article in which article is included
Physical activity related interventions in oil-producing countries in the Arabian Peninsula (Behavioural epidemiology framework, Phase 5)
| Lead Author Country | Target Group (Size) | Description of Intervention | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abduelkarem A [ | Adults with type two diabetes visiting community pharmacies, aged 28–75 years (59) | 3-month intervention where community pharmacies dispense self-care reminders (including physical activity advise); assessment carried out at 3-month, 6-month and 24 month by interview survey (59 % response rate) | Significant increases in physical activity during intervention period; but not at 6 and 24-months |
| Al-Eisa E [ | Women university students aged 18–25 years (58) | 4-week intervention involving Instagram educational and motivational messages to exercise using a 37 min of cardio work out video (81 % response rate) | Significant difference between case and controls to adherence to programme; 17 % cases compared to 4 % controls exercised 8+ times during intervention period |
| Barss P [ | 1st year medical students (41) | Lifestyle curriculum involving 5 lectures; one family lifestyle history assessment; 1 week log on dietary intake and physical activity and an oral presentation | Significant number of students reported increase in physical activity and stair usage following completion of lifestyle course including 46 % starting exercising regularly and 63 % started using stairs more frequently |
| Grant N [ | Families (30) | 8-month family studies programme for 3rd year medical students conducted 10–12 family visits over a period of 8 months. | Two-thirds of families reported in qualitative interviews positive behaviour changes including increase in levels of physical activity |
| Midhet FM [ | Community (population size not reported) | 1 year intervention in all PHC centres involving training physicians on lifestyle counselling and regular health center-based lectures conducted by health educators and medical students | A pre-post test community-based survey found significant increase in levels of brisk walking in men after adjustment for key demographic variables |
| Sharaf F [ | Adults with hypertension, diabetes and coronary artery disease visiting PHC clinics (population size not reported) | 6-month intervention involving training of PHC physicians and health educators aimed to increase knowledge and skills on patient education with a focus on diet, smoking and physical activity | No significant change in physical activity |
All studies provided a brief description of the intervention and reported on behavior change due to the intervention