Abstract

Our special series on Cardiac Rehabilitation outlined the importance of routine physical activity and/or exercise participation in the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease and many other chronic medical conditions. The evidence is overwhelming, demonstrating that nearly everyone can benefit from becoming more physically active. This messaging has been widely disseminated at regional, national, and international levels. Often, this messaging highlights a physical inactivity crisis and the health perils of not engaging in sufficient amounts of physical activity. This deficits-based messaging often includes generic threshold-based recommendations stating that health benefits can only be accrued with specific volumes or intensities of physical activity. In this Editorial, we argue that the current generic and deficits-based messaging misses a great opportunity to focus on the positive and to facilitate hope and real change at the individual, community, and population levels. We advocate a strengths-based approach to health and wellness promotion that focuses on the innate strengths of individuals, families, and communities to enable self-empowerment and self-determination related to health and wellness. By taking a strengths-based approach, we can build hope, promoting the positive aspects of routine physical activity and exercise participation and providing a greater opportunity to enhance health and wellbeing for everyone.

Highlights

  • The health benefits of routine physical activity and exercise participation are irrefutable [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • Through our special series on Cardiac Rehabilitation [77], we highlighted the overwhelming evidence supporting the importance of routine physical activity and/or exercise participation in the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease and many other chronic medical conditions

  • The health benefits of routine physical activity have been widely disseminated; this messaging is often associated with deficits-based recommendations that highlight the risks of not engaging in sufficient amounts of physical activity

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The health benefits of routine physical activity and exercise participation are irrefutable [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Various national and international organizations have provided physical activity recommendations across the lifespan [7,8,9,10,11,12], including recommendations for persons living with chronic medical conditions [13,14,15,16] Concurrent with these guidelines and recommendations are often statements regarding the health perils associated with being physically inactive. Generic recommendations are often provided that fail to take into account the unique attributes of each individual In this Editorial, we argue how this deficits-based approach to physical activity promotion may lead to unintended and undesirable results with respect to health and wellness at the individual, family, community, and societal levels. We advocate for a strengths-based approach to health and wellness promotion that builds upon the innate strengths and aspirations of individuals, families, and communities

Brief Summary of the Evidence
A Strengths-Based Approach and Effective Knowledge Mobilization
Strength Assessment
Resources from the Environment
Relationship is Hope-Inducing
Meaningful Choice
Conclusions
Findings
Key Take-Home Message
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call