| Literature DB >> 35270586 |
Sara Reinodt1, Emma Haglund2,3,4, Ann Bremander2,3,4,5,6, Håkan Jarbin7,8, Ingrid Larsson2,3,9.
Abstract
Physical exercise is a potentially effective treatment for adolescents with mild to moderate depression. However, there is a lack of long-term follow-ups to reveal adolescents' experiences of exercise as a treatment for depression. The salutogenic concept of sense of coherence (SOC), comprising the domains manageability, comprehensibility, and meaningfulness is important to understand behaviour change. This study aimed to describe adolescents' long-term experiences of manageability, comprehensibility, and meaningfulness of a group-based exercise intervention for depression. Fourteen adolescents with persistent depression were recruited from a psychiatric outpatient clinic and interviewed one year after participating in a 14-week moderate to vigorous exercise intervention for depression. An abductive qualitative content analysis was conducted, based on the three SOC domains manageability, comprehensibility, and meaningfulness. The results revealed that participation in the intervention was made manageable by a supportive environment, including: the intervention design, togetherness with peer group, and encouragement from adults. The comprehensibility of the intervention emerged through the insights regarding health benefits of exercise and the aim of the intervention. Meaningfulness was achieved through improved health behaviour, well-being and self-esteem, along with strengthened belief in the future and increased commitment to everyday life. The group-based exercise intervention was experienced as manageable, comprehensible, and meaningful.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; comprehensibility; depression; exercise intervention; manageability; meaningfulness; qualitative content analysis; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35270586 PMCID: PMC8910745 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19052894
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Participant characteristics at one-year follow-up, after participating in group-based exercise intervention for depression (n = 14).
| Characteristics | Participants ( | Female ( | Male ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | |||
| Median (Min-max) | 16.7 (14.0–19.0) | 17.1 (15.7–19.0) | 15.5 (14.0–17.5) |
| Disease duration at baseline (years) | |||
| Median (Min-max) | 2.2 (1.4–5.3) | 2.0 (1.4–5.3) | 2.9 (2.1–3.4) |
| Disease remission at one-year follow-up ( | 8 | 4 | 4 |
| Body Mass Index (kg/m2) | |||
| Median (Min-max) | 28.6 (18.7–37.3) | 29.6 (18.7–35.4) | 22.4 (19.5–37.3) |
| Depression Score Clinician (QIDS-A17-C) * | |||
| Median (Min-max) | 4 (1–9) | 4 (1–9) | 4 (3–4) |
| Depression Score Self-rated (QIDS-A17-SR) * | |||
| Median (Min-max) | 6 (1–18) | 10.5 (1–18) | 5 (3–6) |
* QIDS-A17 (Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology–Adolescent Version) Score: 6–10 points = Mild depression, 11–15 = Moderate, 16–20 = Severe, 21–27 = Very severe [30].
Overview of domains, categories, and subcategories that emerged in the qualitative content analysis of adolescents’ long-term experiences of manageability, comprehensibility, and meaningfulness of a group-based exercise intervention for depression.
| Domain | Category | Subcategory |
|---|---|---|
| Manageability | A supportive environment made the exercise intervention manageable | The intervention design |
| Experiencing togetherness with peers in a group | ||
| Experiencing encouragement from adults | ||
| Comprehensibility | The emerging insights made the exercise intervention comprehensible | Understanding health benefits of exercise |
| Understanding the aim of the intervention | ||
| Meaningfulness | An improved health behaviour made the exercise intervention meaningful | Experiencing increased well-being and improvement in daily routines |
| Experiencing improved self-esteem | ||
| A strengthened belief in the future made the exercise intervention meaningful | Experiencing increased hope for the future | |
| Experiencing increased commitment to everyday life |