On the road again: the impact of an exercise intervention on wellbeing in a clinical sample: preliminary results
On the road again: the impact of an exercise intervention on wellbeing in a clinical sample: preliminary results
Background: There is significant evidence for the impact of exercise programmes on mental and physical health, including individuals with mental health difficulties. On The Road Again is a personal development programme designed to deliver such a programme to vulnerable individuals. Methods: Baseline data was collected for 31 participants, follow-up data was collected for 12 at half-way point in programme (i.e. after 12 weeks of a running programme 3 times a week) Results: Results indicated that over half participants had BMI’s above 25 (i.e. overweight or obese). Sixty percent reported that they been diagnosed with anxiety, depression or both and 50% of participants did not rate their health as good. Follow-up data suggest that Social Support has increased from Time 1 (M= 12.31) to Time 2 (M= 16.46), t(12)= (-2.21, p<.05), fitness has increased (resting pulse) (M= 72.19 at T1, M= 68.13 at T2), t(15)=2.18, p=0.05). Positive trends were observed in exercise, self-efficacy and physical functioning. Discussion: Preliminary results indicate positive mental and physical effects of a physical fitness programme in a clinically vulnerable population. Implications are discussed.
Walsh, Jane
0c15eccf-9a7d-414d-86b3-53a4c622cf7d
Corbett, Teresa
bce81837-17ae-46c3-a6b1-43a7e1f07f9c
2014
Walsh, Jane
0c15eccf-9a7d-414d-86b3-53a4c622cf7d
Corbett, Teresa
bce81837-17ae-46c3-a6b1-43a7e1f07f9c
Walsh, Jane and Corbett, Teresa
(2014)
On the road again: the impact of an exercise intervention on wellbeing in a clinical sample: preliminary results.
The European Health Psychologist, 16 (Supp), [745].
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Meeting abstract
Abstract
Background: There is significant evidence for the impact of exercise programmes on mental and physical health, including individuals with mental health difficulties. On The Road Again is a personal development programme designed to deliver such a programme to vulnerable individuals. Methods: Baseline data was collected for 31 participants, follow-up data was collected for 12 at half-way point in programme (i.e. after 12 weeks of a running programme 3 times a week) Results: Results indicated that over half participants had BMI’s above 25 (i.e. overweight or obese). Sixty percent reported that they been diagnosed with anxiety, depression or both and 50% of participants did not rate their health as good. Follow-up data suggest that Social Support has increased from Time 1 (M= 12.31) to Time 2 (M= 16.46), t(12)= (-2.21, p<.05), fitness has increased (resting pulse) (M= 72.19 at T1, M= 68.13 at T2), t(15)=2.18, p=0.05). Positive trends were observed in exercise, self-efficacy and physical functioning. Discussion: Preliminary results indicate positive mental and physical effects of a physical fitness programme in a clinically vulnerable population. Implications are discussed.
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Published date: 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 412224
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/412224
ISSN: 2225-6962
PURE UUID: e0baaa9c-5c65-40b2-a0ed-ae0b57c01476
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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:24
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Author:
Jane Walsh
Author:
Teresa Corbett
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