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Qualitative systematic review of the acceptability, feasibility, barriers, facilitators and perceived utility of using physical activity in the reduction of and abstinence from alcohol and other drug use

Qualitative systematic review of the acceptability, feasibility, barriers, facilitators and perceived utility of using physical activity in the reduction of and abstinence from alcohol and other drug use
Qualitative systematic review of the acceptability, feasibility, barriers, facilitators and perceived utility of using physical activity in the reduction of and abstinence from alcohol and other drug use
Given the growing global increase in harm from alcohol and substance use, and the inadequacy of standard treatment to tackle the challenge, the use of physical activity (PA) interventions has received increased attention. The aim of this review is to identify common and cross cutting themes relating to how and why physical activity may impact on reduction of/abstinence from alcohol and other drug use to support future intervention design (including aspects of physical activity, barriers and facilitators, and elements of support which may have an
impact). Twenty papers including qualitative data were included in the synthesis. A deductive coding framework was created and sought to identify biological, environmental and psycho-social barriers, facilitators and mechanisms of participants’ experience of engaging with physical activity interventions. Key themes supported in the evidence included how interventions influence use (e.g. reduced cravings, increases in bodily awareness and health and fitness, the development of positive focus and new identity, and increases in mood and quality of life);the impact of frequency, intensity, type, duration and timing of physical activity; perceived barriers and facilitators to engaging in physical activity (e.g. health and fitness, access and affordability, perceptions of others);and details of how much support and in what form best supports sustained changes in physical activity (e.g.social support and environment). Despite evidence being sparse, key barriers and facilitators pertinent to intervention design were identified. Recommendations for future research are indicated and the evidence promotes the need for individually tailored programmes of support for physical activity.
Alcohol, Barriers and facilitators, Mechanisms, Physical activity, Substance use
1755-2966
Sinclair, Julia
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Horrell, J.
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Thompson, Tom P.
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Taylor, Adrian H.
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Neale, Jo
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Husk, Kerryn
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Wanner, Amanda
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Creanor, Siobhan
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Wei, Y.
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Kandiyali, Rebecca
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Nasser, Mona
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Wallace, Gary
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Sinclair, Julia
be3e54d5-c6da-4950-b0ba-3cb8cdcab13c
Horrell, J.
a8adcb1c-9dae-4d69-8693-4444fed40e5a
Thompson, Tom P.
f78fb592-b81b-46f3-96be-ddc60bc4a39d
Taylor, Adrian H.
c7d629e0-c052-46d6-88d8-f61f6c4d8e7d
Neale, Jo
43bfd5ad-9243-4b63-a0ac-f538840b090a
Husk, Kerryn
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Wanner, Amanda
5b93b2dd-78fe-4a8d-a8f6-e3f193c0c2e2
Creanor, Siobhan
fce42a2f-cedf-4c43-9e56-8dff3f2044ed
Wei, Y.
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Kandiyali, Rebecca
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Nasser, Mona
21d4b045-a0c1-48ca-aed8-24834f237848
Wallace, Gary
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Sinclair, Julia, Horrell, J., Thompson, Tom P., Taylor, Adrian H., Neale, Jo, Husk, Kerryn, Wanner, Amanda, Creanor, Siobhan, Wei, Y., Kandiyali, Rebecca, Nasser, Mona and Wallace, Gary (2020) Qualitative systematic review of the acceptability, feasibility, barriers, facilitators and perceived utility of using physical activity in the reduction of and abstinence from alcohol and other drug use. Mental Health and Physical Activity, 19, [100355]. (doi:10.1016/j.mhpa.2020.100355).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Given the growing global increase in harm from alcohol and substance use, and the inadequacy of standard treatment to tackle the challenge, the use of physical activity (PA) interventions has received increased attention. The aim of this review is to identify common and cross cutting themes relating to how and why physical activity may impact on reduction of/abstinence from alcohol and other drug use to support future intervention design (including aspects of physical activity, barriers and facilitators, and elements of support which may have an
impact). Twenty papers including qualitative data were included in the synthesis. A deductive coding framework was created and sought to identify biological, environmental and psycho-social barriers, facilitators and mechanisms of participants’ experience of engaging with physical activity interventions. Key themes supported in the evidence included how interventions influence use (e.g. reduced cravings, increases in bodily awareness and health and fitness, the development of positive focus and new identity, and increases in mood and quality of life);the impact of frequency, intensity, type, duration and timing of physical activity; perceived barriers and facilitators to engaging in physical activity (e.g. health and fitness, access and affordability, perceptions of others);and details of how much support and in what form best supports sustained changes in physical activity (e.g.social support and environment). Despite evidence being sparse, key barriers and facilitators pertinent to intervention design were identified. Recommendations for future research are indicated and the evidence promotes the need for individually tailored programmes of support for physical activity.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 August 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 August 2020
Published date: October 2020
Keywords: Alcohol, Barriers and facilitators, Mechanisms, Physical activity, Substance use

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 444355
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/444355
ISSN: 1755-2966
PURE UUID: fa2b191b-7df5-4e0b-aab6-9d034ed1944f
ORCID for Julia Sinclair: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1905-2025

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Date deposited: 14 Oct 2020 16:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: Julia Sinclair ORCID iD
Author: J. Horrell
Author: Tom P. Thompson
Author: Adrian H. Taylor
Author: Jo Neale
Author: Kerryn Husk
Author: Amanda Wanner
Author: Siobhan Creanor
Author: Y. Wei
Author: Rebecca Kandiyali
Author: Mona Nasser
Author: Gary Wallace

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