• Heart Lung · Sep 2007

    Adherence to a home-walking prescription in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    • Doranne Donesky-Cuenco, Susan Janson, John Neuhaus, Torsten B Neilands, and Virginia Carrieri-Kohlman.
    • Department of Physiological Nursing, School of Nursing, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
    • Heart Lung. 2007 Sep 1;36(5):348-63.

    BackgroundWe know little about long-term exercise behavior and adherence in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).PurposeThe study's purpose was (1) to describe exercise behavior and adherence to a home-walking exercise prescription over 12 months in a sample of patients with COPD; and (2) to validate categories of exercise adherence over time in this population.DesignThis was a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial.SubjectsA total of 103 participants with COPD who were randomly assigned to one of three versions of a dyspnea self-management program participated.MeasuresThe components of exercise frequency, duration, and intensity were measured by exercise/dyspnea daily logs, and participants were classified into categories on the basis of their pattern of exercise adherence over the year.ResultsParticipants walked an average of 3 days per week initially, with a decline to 2.5 days per week over the year. On average, participants walked longer than the prescribed duration of 20 minutes per session. Dyspnea intensity at the end of the walk tended to remain stable at a mean level of 4 over the year. Classification by adherence category distinguished differences in 6-minute walk distance, endurance treadmill test time, Short Form-36 physical function, and Short Form-36 mental health, with endurance treadmill test time and physical function improvements mirroring increases in exercise adherence, and mental health highest among occasional lapse and lowest among relapser and recycle categories.ConclusionsThis investigation provides a description of long-term exercise behavior and adherence in a sample of patients with COPD. The categories suggest that physical benefits are related to consistent adherence, whereas mental health improvements are related to regular exercise with some flexibility in the schedule. Future research should test interventions to improve exercise adherence in patients with COPD and identify characteristics of patients who are most likely and least likely to adhere over time.

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