Abstract

Background: Physical activity (PA) can support cancer patients during medical treatment by reducing side-effects and increasing quality of life. However, PA levels mostly decline after diagnosis. Which factors can explain if patients are able to remain or even increase their PA level? Self-efficacy is an important cognitive factor that has been linked to cancer patients' PA across many studies. In contrast, affective factors such as PA enjoyment have rarely been examined. We compare the influence of self-efficacy and PA enjoyment on cancer patients' PA levels after completion of an exercise or stress-management intervention.Methods: Outpatient cancer patients [N = 72; 54% female; M = 56 years, SD = 12.34; most with breast or colon cancer (34%, 15%)] were enrolled in the MOTIVACTION study, a 4-week intervention (1 h counseling followed by weekly phone calls), with pre-test (T1), post-test (T2), and a 10-week follow-up (T3). Participants were randomized to either an exercise intervention (emphasizing self-regulatory strategies for behavior change) or to a stress management intervention (coping and relaxation techniques). Sixty-seven patients remained in the study and completed the SQUASH assessment of PA, a measure of maintenance self-efficacy (7 items, Cronbach's α = 0.88) and PA enjoyment (2 items, Cronbach's α = 0.89). Regression analyses were calculated with PA level (at T2 and T3) as dependent variable and relative weight analyses were conducted. The study was registered at clinicalTrials.gov (unique identifier:NCT01576107; URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT01576107?term=motivaction&rank=1).Results: Baseline self-efficacy and change in PA enjoyment significantly predicted cancer patients' PA level at T2 adjusting for baseline PA and type of intervention. Relative weight (RW) analysis revealed that PA enjoyment (baseline and change together) explained 34.3% of the dependent variable, self-efficacy (baseline and change) explained 38.4%. At follow-up, self-efficacy was still a significant predictor of PA (RW = 74.6%), whereas PA enjoyment was no longer a relevant factor (RW = 5.2%).Conclusion: The affective factor PA enjoyment was equally important as self-efficacy for predicting cancer patient' PA level directly after completion of the intervention. Reasons for the reduced relevance at follow-up and a broader range of affective factors should be analyzed in future studies on cancer patients' PA level.

Highlights

  • Regular physical activity (PA) has various beneficial effects for cancer patients both during and after medical treatment (Speck et al, 2010; Fong et al, 2012; Jones and Alfano, 2012)

  • The MOTIVACTION (MOTivational InterVention enhancing physical ACTivity In ONcology patients) study consisted of two interventions and assessments at baseline (T1), 4 weeks after the intervention (T2), and 10 weeks after T2 (T3)

  • The sample consisted of 72 cancer patients who were insufficiently active, that is not meeting guidelines of at least 150 min/week moderate PA at T1 (M = 47.22 min)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Regular physical activity (PA) has various beneficial effects for cancer patients both during and after medical treatment (Speck et al, 2010; Fong et al, 2012; Jones and Alfano, 2012). The TPB and the SCT have most frequently been applied to explain the low PA level of cancer patients (see Pinto and Ciccolo, 2011 for an overview). There were moderate associations (r = 0.69/r = 0.43) between perceived behavioral control (similar to self-efficacy) and PA level/ intention in a cross-sectional study of 600 colorectal cancer survivors (SpeedAndrews et al, 2012). Physical activity (PA) can support cancer patients during medical treatment by reducing side-effects and increasing quality of life. Self-efficacy is an important cognitive factor that has been linked to cancer patients’ PA across many studies. We compare the influence of self-efficacy and PA enjoyment on cancer patients’ PA levels after completion of an exercise or stress-management intervention

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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