Daily spousal influence on physical activity in knee osteoarthritis

Lynn M Martire, Mary Ann Parris Stephens, Jacqueline Mogle, Richard Schulz, Jennifer Brach, Francis J Keefe, Lynn M Martire, Mary Ann Parris Stephens, Jacqueline Mogle, Richard Schulz, Jennifer Brach, Francis J Keefe

Abstract

Background: Physical activity is critical for the management of knee osteoarthritis, and the spouse may play a role in encouraging or discouraging physical activity.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to examine four types of spousal influence-spouses' daily activity, autonomy support, pressure, and persuasion-on the daily physical activity of adults living with knee osteoarthritis.

Methods: A total of 141 couples reported their daily experiences for 22 days using a handheld computer and wore an accelerometer to measure moderate activity and steps.

Results: Spouses' autonomy support for patient physical activity, as well as their own level of activity, was concurrently associated with patients' greater daily moderate activity and steps. In addition, on days when male patients perceived that spouses exerted more pressure to be active, they spent less time in moderate activity.

Conclusions: Couple-oriented interventions for knee osteoarthritis should target physical activity in both partners and spousal strategies for helping patients stay active.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The moderating effect of gender for minutes of patient moderate physical activity. High and low levels of pressure were calculated as 1 standard deviation above and below the mean using the within-person standard deviation to indicate daily deviations in pressure (rather than between person differences). The figure presents estimated values for male and female patients at low, average, and high levels of pressure.

Source: PubMed

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