Physical Activity Behaviour Change After Advice
Cross-source consensus on Physical Activity Behaviour Change After Advice from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
How it works
Benefits
Comparisons
Evidence quality
Highlighted claims
- The association between advice receipt and increased activity is observational and self-reported, so it does not prove causality. — Physical activity advice from general practitioners in Germany: findings from a cross-sectional population survey of individuals with chronic ischaemic heart disease (OptiCor study)
- Among patients who received at least one element of GP advice, 72.5% reported becoming more active or more regularly active afterwards. — Physical activity advice from general practitioners in Germany: findings from a cross-sectional population survey of individuals with chronic ischaemic heart disease (OptiCor study)
- Receiving all three 3As elements was associated with a substantially higher rate of reported activity increase compared with receiving only partial advice. — Physical activity advice from general practitioners in Germany: findings from a cross-sectional population survey of individuals with chronic ischaemic heart disease (OptiCor study)
- The pattern of higher activity change with complete 3As advice supports the importance of delivering all three elements rather than stopping at assessment or general advice. — Physical activity advice from general practitioners in Germany: findings from a cross-sectional population survey of individuals with chronic ischaemic heart disease (OptiCor study)