Abstract

BackgroundTo date multimorbidity has not received much attention in health policies, even though multiple chronic diseases put high demands on the health care system in industrial nations. Enormous costs of care and a physically, mentally, and socially reduced quality of life are common consequences of multimorbidity. Physical activity (PA) has a positive preventive and therapeutic effect on common non-communicable diseases. The objective of this study will be to evaluate the health benefits and harms of PA interventions for sedentary adults with multimorbidity in primary care settings.MethodsThis is the study protocol for a systematic review. We will search PubMed, MEDLINE (Ovid), Web of Science, CINHAL, and the Cochrane Library (from inception onwards). In addition, clinical trial registers and reference lists of included studies will be searched. We will include randomized controlled trials, quasi-experimental, and non-randomized trials examining the health benefits and harms of PA interventions with or without additional lifestyle interventions for sedentary adult patients with multimorbidity (e.g., two or more chronic non-communicable diseases) in primary care. Eligible control groups will be standard care, placebo, or medications. Two reviewers will independently screen all citations, abstracts data, and full-text articles. The primary outcomes will be health-related quality of life and mortality. Secondary outcomes will include cardiovascular fitness, muscular strength and disease-specific outcomes (e.g., depression score), biomarkers as well as control of metabolic risk factors (e.g., blood pressure, HBA1c, body weight) and any adverse event. The methodological quality of the studies will be appraised using appropriate tools. If feasible, we will conduct random effects meta-analysis. Additional analyses will be conducted to explore the potential sources of heterogeneity (e.g., study design, geographical location, or type of intervention). Strength of the body of evidence will be assessed according to the Grading of Recommendations Assessment (GRADE).DiscussionThis review will evaluate the evidence on health benefits and harms of PA interventions for sedentary adults with multimorbidity in primary care settings. We anticipate our findings to be of interest to patients, their families, caregivers, and healthcare professionals in selecting and conducting optimal health promotion programs. Possible implications for further research will be discussed.Systematic review registrationOpen Science Framework (registration identifier: osf.io/ka8yu)

Highlights

  • To date multimorbidity has not received much attention in health policies, even though multiple chronic diseases put high demands on the health care system in industrial nations

  • This review will evaluate the evidence on health benefits and harms of Physical activity (PA) interventions for sedentary adults with multimorbidity in primary care settings

  • We anticipate our findings to be of interest to patients, their families, caregivers, and healthcare professionals in selecting and conducting optimal health promotion programs

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Summary

Methods

The present protocol has been registered within Open Science Framework (registration identifier: osf.io/ka8yu) and is being reported in accordance with the reporting guidance provided in the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis Protocols (PRISMA-P) statement [17, 18] (see checklist in Additional file 1). Quality assessment All of the included studies will be critically appraised by two independent reviewers to assess the methodological quality. To the methodological quality the checklists are used to determine the extent of which studies address the possibility of bias in design, conduct, and analysis. Data collection process Two independent reviewers will perform the data extraction by use of a pre-specified data extraction sheet This includes full participant description and study design. Therapy characteristics such as dosage principles (type of exercise, frequency, duration, and intensity) of applied PA and PA promotion will be extracted. Where data support quantitative synthesis (two or more studies which report a similar primary outcome [27]), meta-analysis will be conducted.

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