Behavioral Counseling in Primary Care to Promote Physical Activity: Recommendation and Rationale: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force
United States Preventive Services Task Force
Keywords
guidelines, medicine, oncology, prevention, screening, skin cancer, u.s. preventive services task force
Citation
United States Preventive Services Task Force. Behavioral Counseling in Primary Care to Promote Physical Activity: Recommendation and Rationale: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. The Internet Journal of Family Practice. 2002 Volume 2 Number 2.
Abstract
Summary Of Recommendation
The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) concludes that the evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against behavioral counseling in primary care settings to promote physical activity.
I recommendation.
Clinical Considerations
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Regular physical activity helps prevent cardiovascular disease, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, obesity, and osteoporosis. It may also decrease all-cause morbidity and lengthen life-span.
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Benefits of physical activity are seen at even modest levels of activity, such as walking or bicycling 30 minutes per day on most days of the week. Benefits increase with increasing levels of activity.
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Whether routine counseling and follow-up by primary care physicians results in increased physical activity among their adult patients is unclear. Existing studies limit the conclusions that can be drawn about efficacy, effectiveness, and feasibility of primary care physical activity counseling. Most studies have tested brief, minimal, and low-intensity primary care interventions, such as 3 to 5 minute counseling sessions in the context of a routine clinical visit.
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Multi-component interventions combining provider advice with behavioral interventions to facilitate and reinforce healthy levels of physical activity appear the most promising. Such interventions often include patient goal setting, written exercise prescriptions, individually tailored physical activity regimens, and mailed or telephone follow-up assistance provided by specially trained staff. Linking primary care patients to community-based physical activity and fitness programs may enhance the effectiveness of primary care clinician counseling.
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Potential harms of physical activity counseling have not been well defined or studied. They may include muscle and fall-related injuries or cardiovascular events.
6 It is unclear whether more extensive patient screening, certain types of physical activity (e.g., moderate vs. vigorous exercise), more gradual increases in exercise, or more intensive counseling and follow-up monitoring will decrease the likelihood of injuries related to physical activity. Existing studies provide insufficient evidence regarding the potential harms of various activity protocols, such as moderate compared with vigorous exercise.
Scientific Evidence
Epidemiology and Clinical Consequences
Observational studies show that sedentary lifestyles (little or no leisure time, household, or occupational physical activity) are associated with increased risks for many chronic diseases and conditions, including cardiovascular disease, hypertension, diabetes, obesity, and osteoporosis, and that increased levels of physical activity can reduce these risks.3 Despite the well-established benefits of exercise, 20% to 30% of adult Americans reported being sedentary in 1996.4 Only about 20% of adults achieved the recommended
Physical activity counseling practices of clinicians are highly variable. In a 1992 survey, 40% of internists reported assessing the activity status of patients, but only 25% of all the internists reported writing physical activity plans for patients.7,8 Similarly, 30% of nurse practitioners reportedly assessed the physical activity levels of patients, but only 14% of all the nurse practitioners provided written exercise plans.7,8 In a survey conducted in 1997, 42% of adult respondents reported receiving advice from their primary care providers to increase physical activity levels.2 However, the validity of such patient estimates are limited because the studies from which they were derived used varied and unclear definitions of “clinician counseling” or relied on patient recall of physical activity counseling previously received in the primary care setting.
Effectiveness of Counseling
The ideal evidence in support of counseling would directly link counseling to improved health outcomes in a controlled trial. In the absence of such evidence, the clinical logic behind counseling is based on a series of critical assumptions: the clinician must be able to assess whether a patient is sedentary or physically active; the clinician uses critical components of counseling that must be routinely replicable among patients; counseling must increase and maintain physical activity among sedentary patients; and the benefits of this increase in physical activity must be greater than any adverse effects of assessment, counseling, and increased activity.
Several theories are available on which to build counseling interventions; many of the studies examined by the USPSTF reported using more than one theory.9 Most behavioral counseling strategies developed and tested for routine use by primary care providers seek to condense a more intensive, clinic-based, cognitive-behavioral intervention into a brief intervention that fits readily into routine primary care. Physical activity counseling interventions often include a single 3-5 minute encounter with the clinician, followed for some by a follow-up session with either the clinician or another member of the health care team. Such counseling may occur alone or in the context of preventive clinical screenings and other lifestyle behavior change interventions. In most reports, the details of the counseling intervention were incomplete. It was thus difficult to determine whether a specific counseling component was significant or essential to changing behavior. There were too few studies available or of acceptable quality to determine whether a particular counseling technique outperformed others in producing behavior change.
The USPSTF found 8 fair to good quality controlled trials (7 randomized,6,10,11,12,13,14,15 and 1 not randomized 16) and 5 poor quality trials that addressed whether counseling involving a primary care clinician improved physical activity. Most trials involved sedentary adults. Most studies directly tested whether physical activity counseling in the primary care setting was beneficial, although some10,12,14 were designed to test whether educating clinicians to provide physical activity counseling was beneficial. Some interventions addressed multiple behaviors (smoking, alcohol use, and sedentary behaviors). Reports often provided limited detail regarding counseling interventions, and in several studies, delivery or receipt of the intervention was not confirmed. Some trials studied selected patient and/or provider populations. Most fair to good quality trials followed participants for at least 6 to 12 months and had follow-up rates of 85%. Few studies included efforts to verify or validate self-reported behavioral outcomes.
The six trials of fair to good quality that compared physical activity counseling protocols to usual care provided mixed results.10-14,16 Of the three trials reporting short-term ( 6 months) behavioral outcomes, one found significantly higher physical activity levels in the intervention group, and two found no differences between intervention and control groups in activity levels. Of the six trials that reported long-term ( 6 months) behavioral outcomes, two found significantly higher physical activity levels in the intervention group, and four found no differences between intervention and control groups in levels of physical activity.
Two fair to good quality randomized trials compared two or more different interventions aimed at increasing physical activity.6,15 In one, patients receiving advice and an exercise prescription were significantly more active at 6 weeks than those receiving only advice.15 The second trial compared increasingly intensive interventions delivered over a 2 year period.6 The intervention groups in this study included: physician advice alone totaling about 18 minutes; physician advice plus moderate intensity health educator behavioral counseling totaling about 3 hours; and physician advice plus more intensive health educator behavioral counseling totaling about 9 hours. The study did not find any significant overall group differences in self-reported physical activity or cardio-respiratory fitness at 6, 12, and 24 months. However, women in the most intensively counseled group reported significantly higher energy expenditure at 6 months than women in the moderate intensity counseling and advice-only groups, and women in the moderate and intensive counseling groups were documented to have significantly higher fitness levels at 24 months (measured by V02 max) than women in the advice-only group.
The USPSTF found no completed studies examining the effectiveness of physical activity counseling for children or adolescents that compared treatment to a usual care control. Several such studies are in progress.
Potential Adverse Effects of Counseling
Only one of the trials reviewed, monitored, and reported potential harms related to physical activity counseling.6 This trial, in which initially sedentary program participants between 35 and 75 years of age chose either moderate or vigorous activity, found an approximate 60% rate of musculoskeletal injuries and 30% rate of symptoms that may represent cardiovascular problems (chest pain, difficulty breathing, dizziness or loss of consciousness) over two years, with no significant differences between groups randomized to physician advice, physician advice plus behavioral counseling, or physician advice plus more intensive counseling. As this trial did not have a control group that received currently recommended care, it is difficult to ascertain whether any of the reported harms were directly due to physical activity counseling.
Widespread implementation of counseling could increase demand on clinical staff. However, available evidence suggests that clinicians may view counseling as a benefit to their practices. In a large randomized controlled trial, 63% of participating clinicians reported that counseling caused little to no increase in the length of the routine visit, 33% percent reported there was some increase, and only 4% complained of a substantial increase in the length of patient visits. Most clinicians (83%) felt that offering physical activity counseling was a benefit to the clinic.17
Discussion
Many benefits of physical activity have been identified in epidemiologic and laboratory studies. The challenge to clinicians and communities is to determine how to promote appropriate levels of regular physical activity in large segments of the population. The USPSTF and the Task Force on Community Preventive Services have addressed these issues. Whereas the USPSTF addressed the effectiveness of clinician counseling in primary care to increase physical activity, the Task Force on Community Preventive Services has addressed the effectiveness of community-based programs that target groups rather than individual patients.5 That Task Force found a number of interventions to be effective in promoting physical activity, including community wide campaigns, changing school-based physical education programs, improving access to places for physical activity, and individually-adapted behavior change programs. The latter programs generally recruited groups of volunteers at community sites, work sites, or schools; used group settings to set individual goals and teach skills for incorporating physical activity into daily routines; and provided reinforcement and problem-solving through phone contact or group meetings.
Although some intervention trials suggest that primary care counseling can promote increases in physical activity, the sum of studies conducted and reported to date are inadequate to determine the overall efficacy, effectiveness, and feasibility of physical activity counseling by clinicians in primary care settings. Reasons for mixed results among existing studies are not clear but involve variability in the rigor with which the interventions were delivered or evaluated, and may reflect a failure to distinguish patients who were ready to begin an exercise program from those who were not, or a lack of the most effective mix of intervention strategies. Further studies are needed of the effects of clinician counseling on the level of physical activity in children, adolescents, and adults. The balance of benefits and harms, as well as approaches to preventing adverse effects, particularly among older adults and those less fit, needs further exploration.
Recommendations Of Others
The Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care concluded that the evidence for or against a recommendation to include physical activity counseling in the periodic health examination was lacking“”.18 Many organizations and Federal agencies recommend that healthcare providers counsel individuals about physical activity; these recommendations are based on the health benefits of physical activity rather than on the effectiveness of counseling by clinicians for promoting changes in physical activity. Such organizations include the Department of Health and Human Services (
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Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality http://www.ahrq.gov/
Corresponding Author: Alfred O. Berg, MD, MPH, Chair, U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, c/o David Atkins, MD, MPH, Chief Medical Officer, Center for Practice and Technology Assessment, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 6010 Executive Boulevard, Suite 300, Rockville, MD 20852. (301) 594-4016, fax (301) 594-4027, Email: uspstf@ahrq.gov.
Members of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force are Alfred O. Berg, MD, MPH, Chair, USPSTF (Professor and Chair, Department of Family Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA); Janet D. Allan, PhD, RN, CS, FAAN, Vice-chair, USPSTF (Dean and Professor, School of Nursing, University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio, TX); Paul Frame, MD (Tri-County Family Medicine, Cohocton, NY, and Clinical Professor of Family Medicine, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY); Charles J. Homer, MD, MPH (Executive Director, National Initiative for Children's Healthcare Quality, Boston, MA); Mark S. Johnson, MD, MPH (Chair, Department of Family Medicine, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ); Jonathan D. Klein, MD, MPH (Associate Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, NY); Tracy A. Lieu, MD, MPH (Associate Professor, Department of Ambulatory Care and Prevention, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA); Cynthia D. Mulrow, MD, MSc (Clinical Professor and Director, Department of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center, and Director, National Program Office for Robert Wood Johnson Generalist Physician Faculty Scholars Program, San Antonio, TX); Tracy C. Orleans, PhD (Senior Scientist and Senior Program Officer, The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Princeton, NJ); Jeffrey F. Peipert, MD, MPH (Director of Research, Women and Infants' Hospital, Providence, RI); Nola J. Pender, PhD, RN, FAAN (Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI); Albert L. Siu, MD, MSPH (Professor of Medicine, Chief of Division of General Internal Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY); Steven M. Teutsch, MD, MPH (Senior Director, Outcomes Research and Management, Merck & Company, Inc., West Point, PA); Carolyn Westhoff, MD, MSc (Professor, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Columbia University, New York, NY); and Steven H. Woolf, MD, MPH (Professor, Department of Family Practice and Department of Preventive and Community Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Fairfax, VA).
This statement summarizes the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommendations on counseling by primary care physicians to promote physical activity and the supporting scientific evidence, and it updates the 1996 recommendations contained in the