Role of mental health and quality of life in adherence and effectiveness of a motivational exercise program to improve weight and functionality: “The way to change diabetes”
J. M. Pelayo-Terán, S. Vega-García, Z. Gutiérrez-Hervás, M. E. García-Llamas, A. Díez-Hernández, M. E. López Crespo, D. J. Durán Román, H. J. Bilo, Y. Zapico Merayo

TL;DR
A 20-week supervised walking program improved weight, fitness, and quality of life for people with diabetes or cardiovascular risk, but mental health and motivation affected adherence.
Contribution
The study links baseline mental health and quality of life to program adherence and outcomes in a diabetes-focused exercise intervention.
Findings
Participants who completed the program increased weekly steps, reduced BMI, and improved quality of life scores.
Poorer baseline mental health and quality of life predicted higher dropout rates.
Improved step count correlated with better quality of life outcomes.
Abstract
Exercise and other lifestyles are key treatment strategies to improve diabetes outcome, prevent cardiovascular risk and may also result in further results in quality if life and emotional symptoms. To evaluate the effectiveness of an exercise intervention program for people with diabetes or cardiovascular risk. To evaluate the influence of previous metal health and quality of life status in the results. 61 people with a type 2 diabetes or cardiovascular risk factors were recruited from health primary health centers in Ponferrada (EL Bierzo), including patients from the mental health association. After informed consent they were included in a 20 week, twice a week supervised walking training program to improve exercise and other lifestyles. A poster used for advertisement of the adtivity (“the way/walk to change diabetes”) is displayed in image 1). Baseline and after 20 weeks BMI and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth and Lifestyle Studies
