wow-inequalities/02-data/intermediate/wos_sample/aae5ace40b13b09a44f0cf264150cb20-guglielmo-dana-and/info.yaml

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2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
abstract: 'Primary care providers (PCPs) can offer counseling to adults with
arthritis on physical activity, which can reduce pain and improve
physical function, mental health, and numerous other health outcomes. We
analyzed cross-sectional 2018 DocStyles data for 1,366 PCPs who reported
they always or sometimes recommend physical activity to adults with
arthritis. Most PCPs sampled (88.2\%) recommended walking, swimming, or
cycling; 65.5\% did not recommend any evidence-based,
arthritis-appropriate physical activity programs recognized by the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Opportunities exist for
public health awareness campaigns to educate PCPs about evidence-based
physical activity programs proven to optimize health for adults with
arthritis when more than counseling is needed. Objective Physical
activity is recommended for adults with all types of arthritis because
it can reduce pain and improve physical functioning, mood, and quality
of life (1,2). Professional organizations encourage health care
professionals to counsel adults with arthritis on physical activity and
recommend supervised programs when needed (3,4). Primary care providers
(PCPs) frequently treat arthritis (5) and are instrumental in promoting
physical activity. Although we previously found that 98.4\% of PCPs
always or sometimes recommend physical activity to adults with arthritis
(6), the content of physical activity counseling may affect its
effectiveness (3). Addressing patient concerns (eg, arthritis-specific
physical activity barriers such as pain) warrants specific guidance and
referrals to safe, supervised programs (3). To build on a previous
study, we examined physical activity types and programs recommended
among PCPs recommending physical activity to adults with any type of
arthritis and compared distributions of characteristics of PCPs
recommending programs versus PCPs unaware of them. Methods We analyzed
cross-sectional data from 2018 Porter Novelli Doc Styles
(https://styles.porternovelli.com/docstyles), an online national market
research survey assessing PCP attitudes, patient en counters, and use of
medical information resources. Eligible Doc-Styles participants were
family practitioners, internists, obstetri-cian/gynecologists, and nurse
practitioners aged 21 or older, liv-ing and practicing in the US,
practicing for at least 3 years, treat-ing at least 10 patients weekly,
and working at an individual, group, or inpatient practice. From June
through August 2018, Porter Novelli invited participants by email to
complete the sur-vey from the Sermo Global Medical Panel
(www.sermo.com), SurveyHealthcareGlobus
(www.surveyhealthcareglobus.com), and WebMD (www.webmd.com). Target
quotas (1,000 PCPs, 250 ob-stetricians/gynecologists, and 250 nurse
practitioners) were met by inviting highly responsive participants
(defined as completing >75\% of any kind of survey {[}not only
DocStyles] in which they had been invited to participate) first from
among those not parti-cipating in DocStyles 2017. Of 2,582 invited
persons, 1,505 com-pleted the survey (response rate, 58.3\%) and were
compensated \$55 to \$77 based on number of questions asked. We excluded
116 PCPs not treating adults with arthritis and 23 never recommend-ing
physical activity, which resulted in an analytic sample of 1,366.
Additional survey details are available elsewhere (6). Al-though
analyses were not subject to Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention''s (CDC''s) institutional review board, we followed all Council
of American Survey Research Organizations guidelines, and the data set
was deidentified.
The 2018 DocStyles Survey included a module with questions about
recommendations for CDC-recognized arthritis-appropriate physical
activity programs (hereafter ``programs{''''}) (7), which have an evidence
base for addressing physical activity barriers (8). PCPs treating an
average of at least 1 adult with arthritis weekly completed multiple
choice questions about physical activity coun-seling for adults with
arthritis, including physical activity types, programs recommended, and
reasons for not recommending pro-grams. We calculated percentages for
physical activity type and program variables overall (N = 1,366) and
reasons for not recommending programs among PCPs not recommending
programs (n = 895). To identify opportunities for promoting program
awareness, we gen-erated distributions of PCP characteristics overall (N
= 1,366) and for those recommending programs (n = 471) and unaware of
pro-grams (n = 710). We generated percentages using SAS version 9.4 (SAS
Institute Inc); we performed chi 2 tests in Excel version 2008
(Microsoft Corp) to assess differences (significant at alpha = .05)
between PCP groups. Results PCPs were commonly aged 50 or older (46.2\%;
95\% CI, 43.5\%-48.8\%), men (57.5\%; 95\% CI, 54.8\%-60.1\%),
non-Hispanic White (67.1\%; 95\% CI, 64.6\%-69.6\%), and working in a
group outpatient practice (67.5\%; 95\% CI, 65.0\%-70.0\%) (Ta-ble).
Most PCPs recommended walking, swimming, or cycling (88.2\%; 95\% CI,
86.5\%-89.9\%), stretching (63.8\%; 95\% CI, 61.3\%-66.4\%), and
physical therapy (60.8\%; 95\% CI, 58.2\%-63.4\%) (Figure). Programs
were recommended less fre-quently than physical activity: 34.5\% (n =
471) of PCPs recom-mended 1 or more programs. The most commonly
recommended programs were the Arthritis Foundation''s Aquatic Program
(18.0\%; 95\% CI, 16.0\%-20.0\%), the Arthritis Foundation''s Exer-cise
Program (14.4\%; 95\% CI, 12.6\%-16.3\%), and Walk With Ease (13.8\%;
95\% CI, 12.0\%-15.7\%) (Figure). Most PCPs did not recommend any
programs (65.5\%; 95\% CI, 63.0\%-68.0\%); among this group (n = 895),
the most commonly reported reasons were being unaware of them (n = 710;
79.3\%; 95\% CI, 76.7\%-82.0\%); programs were unavailable in their area
(22.5\%; 95\% CI, 19.7\%-25.2\%), unaffordable for patients (12.5\%;
95\% CI, 10.3\%-14.7\%), or inaccessible to patients (12.2\%; 95\% CI,
10.0\%-14.3\%); and believing patients would not attend (10.5\%; 95\%
CI, 8.5\%-12.5\%).'
affiliation: 'Guglielmo, D (Corresponding Author), Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth
Promot, Div Populat Hlth, Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, 4770 Buford Hwy NE,MS S107-6,
Atlanta, GA 30341 USA.
Guglielmo, Dana; Theis, Kristina A.; Helmick, Charles G.; Odom, Erica L.; Duca,
Lindsey M.; Croft, Janet B., Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Div Populat
Hlth, Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, 4770 Buford Hwy NE,MS S107-6, Atlanta, GA 30341
USA.
Guglielmo, Dana, Oak Ridge Inst Sci \& Educ, Oak Ridge, TN USA.
Murphy, Louise B., Optum Life Sci Inc, Eden Prairie, MN USA.
Boring, Michael A., ASRT Inc, Smyrna, GA USA.
Omura, John D., Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Div Nutr Phys Act \&
Obes, Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Atlanta, GA USA.
Duca, Lindsey M., Natl Ctr Chron Dis Prevent \& Hlth Promot, Epidem Intelligence
Serv, Ctr Dis Control \& Prevent, Atlanta, GA USA.'
article-number: e92
author: Guglielmo, Dana and Theis, Kristina A. and Murphy, Louise B. and Boring, Michael
A. and Helmick, Charles G. and Omura, John D. and Odom, Erica L. and Duca, Lindsey
M. and Croft, Janet B.
author-email: danagugliel@gmail.com
author_list:
- family: Guglielmo
given: Dana
- family: Theis
given: Kristina A.
- family: Murphy
given: Louise B.
- family: Boring
given: Michael A.
- family: Helmick
given: Charles G.
- family: Omura
given: John D.
- family: Odom
given: Erica L.
- family: Duca
given: Lindsey M.
- family: Croft
given: Janet B.
da: '2023-09-28'
doi: 10.5888/pcd18.210194
files: []
issn: 1545-1151
journal: PREVENTING CHRONIC DISEASE
keywords-plus: EXERCISE; BENEFITS
language: English
month: OCT
number-of-cited-references: '12'
orcid-numbers: 'Odom, Erica/0000-0003-0080-8192
Guglielmo, Dana/0000-0001-5879-9474'
papis_id: afe53442cd6c3379f5bcd83ef4f066d9
ref: Guglielmo2021physicalactivity
times-cited: '0'
title: Physical Activity Types and Programs Recommended by Primary Care Providers
Treating Adults With Arthritis, DocStyles 2018
2023-10-01 08:15:07 +00:00
type: article
2023-09-28 14:46:10 +00:00
unique-id: WOS:000717282900002
usage-count-last-180-days: '1'
usage-count-since-2013: '2'
volume: '18'
web-of-science-categories: Public, Environmental \& Occupational Health
year: '2021'