Pedometry to Prevent Cardiorespiratory Fitness Decline-Is it Effective?

Physically active providers are more likely to prescribe exercise. Unfortunately, many become sedentary during their training. We examined pedometry as an incentive to promote physical activity in a cohort of medical students. This was a prospective, unblinded clinical trial of pedometry. 107 precli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Military medicine 2016-10, Vol.181 (10), p.1235-1239
Hauptverfasser: Lystrup, Robert M, West, Gordon F, Olsen, Cara, Ward, Matthew, Stephens, Mark B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Physically active providers are more likely to prescribe exercise. Unfortunately, many become sedentary during their training. We examined pedometry as an incentive to promote physical activity in a cohort of medical students. This was a prospective, unblinded clinical trial of pedometry. 107 preclinical medical students volunteered. 50 students received Fitbit pedometers and 57 served as controls. All students ran 1.5- or 2-mile timed runs before pedometer issue, and again 1 year after. Change in run times were the primary outcome measure. Step counts, body composition, and exercise frequency were secondary outcomes. 76% of students with pedometers reported increased motivation to exercise and 57% reported changing daily routines as a result of pedometry. Active pedometry participants declined from 48/50 initially to 22/50 over 13 months. Run times slowed an average of 5.0 seconds for pedometry users vs. 12.3 seconds for the control group. This difference was not statistically significant (p = 0.48). A subset of future physicians reported increased motivation to exercise after a trial of pedometry. However, adherence over the long term was poor and it seems to have a limited impact on aerobic exercise performance in this population.
ISSN:0026-4075
1930-613X
DOI:10.7205/MILMED-D-15-00540