Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases

BACKGROUND: The majority of global deaths are due to noncommunicable diseases, largely preventable and treatable utilising behavioural interventions. OBJECTIVES: The study investigated patients' experiences of a lifestyle intervention programme for noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), and the influence that psychosocial and programme-related barriers had on patients' ability to improve their well-being METHODS: Fourteen patients with NCDs were interviewed before and on completion of a 12-week lifestyle intervention programme at a sports and exercise medicine clinic. Thematic analysis techniques were used to analyse interview data. RESULTS: Patients described their experiences of NCDs diagnosis as traumatic, and their own relationship with their bodies and with the disorder(s) to be vulnerable and significantly challenging. Professional incompetence and unethical treatment were included as barriers to recovery. Barriers specifically relating to the programme included scheduling, as well as the online assessment component. Those reporting more premorbid psychosocial barriers were more likely to experience current complications, whether disease- or treatment-related, often emphasising the negative influence of programme and professional-related problems. CONCLUSION: Qualitative methodologies enabled the study to yield clinically relevant insights with respect to patients with NCDs. Accounting for the trauma and vulnerability experienced by this cohort may assist in the development of more patient-centred interventions and sustainable secondary prevention of NCDs.

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Main Authors: Skowno,P, Derman,W, Stein,D J, Draper,C E
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: The South African Sports Medicine Association 2016
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632016000300003
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spelling oai:scielo:S1015-516320160003000032017-03-10Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseasesSkowno,PDerman,WStein,D JDraper,C E chronic diseases of lifestyle intervention evaluation psychological risk factors social support professional conduct BACKGROUND: The majority of global deaths are due to noncommunicable diseases, largely preventable and treatable utilising behavioural interventions. OBJECTIVES: The study investigated patients' experiences of a lifestyle intervention programme for noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), and the influence that psychosocial and programme-related barriers had on patients' ability to improve their well-being METHODS: Fourteen patients with NCDs were interviewed before and on completion of a 12-week lifestyle intervention programme at a sports and exercise medicine clinic. Thematic analysis techniques were used to analyse interview data. RESULTS: Patients described their experiences of NCDs diagnosis as traumatic, and their own relationship with their bodies and with the disorder(s) to be vulnerable and significantly challenging. Professional incompetence and unethical treatment were included as barriers to recovery. Barriers specifically relating to the programme included scheduling, as well as the online assessment component. Those reporting more premorbid psychosocial barriers were more likely to experience current complications, whether disease- or treatment-related, often emphasising the negative influence of programme and professional-related problems. CONCLUSION: Qualitative methodologies enabled the study to yield clinically relevant insights with respect to patients with NCDs. Accounting for the trauma and vulnerability experienced by this cohort may assist in the development of more patient-centred interventions and sustainable secondary prevention of NCDs.The South African Sports Medicine AssociationSouth African Journal of Sports Medicine v.28 n.3 20162016-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632016000300003en
institution SCIELO
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country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Skowno,P
Derman,W
Stein,D J
Draper,C E
spellingShingle Skowno,P
Derman,W
Stein,D J
Draper,C E
Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
author_facet Skowno,P
Derman,W
Stein,D J
Draper,C E
author_sort Skowno,P
title Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
title_short Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
title_full Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
title_fullStr Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
title_sort experiences of psychosocial and programme-related barriers to recovery in lifestyle interventions for noncommunicable diseases
description BACKGROUND: The majority of global deaths are due to noncommunicable diseases, largely preventable and treatable utilising behavioural interventions. OBJECTIVES: The study investigated patients' experiences of a lifestyle intervention programme for noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), and the influence that psychosocial and programme-related barriers had on patients' ability to improve their well-being METHODS: Fourteen patients with NCDs were interviewed before and on completion of a 12-week lifestyle intervention programme at a sports and exercise medicine clinic. Thematic analysis techniques were used to analyse interview data. RESULTS: Patients described their experiences of NCDs diagnosis as traumatic, and their own relationship with their bodies and with the disorder(s) to be vulnerable and significantly challenging. Professional incompetence and unethical treatment were included as barriers to recovery. Barriers specifically relating to the programme included scheduling, as well as the online assessment component. Those reporting more premorbid psychosocial barriers were more likely to experience current complications, whether disease- or treatment-related, often emphasising the negative influence of programme and professional-related problems. CONCLUSION: Qualitative methodologies enabled the study to yield clinically relevant insights with respect to patients with NCDs. Accounting for the trauma and vulnerability experienced by this cohort may assist in the development of more patient-centred interventions and sustainable secondary prevention of NCDs.
publisher The South African Sports Medicine Association
publishDate 2016
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1015-51632016000300003
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