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What are the experiences of people with heart failure regarding participation in physical activity? A systematic review, meta-aggregation and development of a logic model

What are the experiences of people with heart failure regarding participation in physical activity? A systematic review, meta-aggregation and development of a logic model
What are the experiences of people with heart failure regarding participation in physical activity? A systematic review, meta-aggregation and development of a logic model
Objectives: to (1) synthesise the experiences of people with heart failure and those who care for them concerning participation in physical activity (2) develop a logic model for a future intervention which will support people with heart failure to feel confident and safe in being physically active.

Design: to systematic review and meta-aggregation using Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology.

Data sources: MEDLINE, Emcare and PsycINFO databases were searched through until June 2024 inclusively.

Eligibility criteria: studies with a qualitative design, including qualitative components of mixed-methods studies, which describe experiences of participation in physical activity by adults with chronic heart failure.

Data extraction and synthesis: two independent reviewers used standardised methods to search and screen studies. Data extraction included the PROGRESS-Plus items. The JBI checklist for qualitative studies was applied. Meta-aggregation guided by JBI methods was used to synthesise the data. This evidence, along with input from a patient and public involvement group, healthcare professionals and charity organisations, was used to develop a logic model.

Results We included 28 papers (25 studies) comprising 14 qualitative studies and 11 mixed-method studies describing the perspectives of 483 people with heart failure, 64 carers and 12 healthcare professionals.

The meta-aggregation produced seven synthesised findings describing the impact of physical symptoms, emotional factors, extrinsic factors, access to knowledge, self-motivation and peer/professional motivation and the positive impact of physical activity. The PROGRESS-PLUS tool identified significant inclusivity issues within the studies. The meta-aggregation with relevant contributor input informed behavioural determinants and potential intervention components of a logic model.

Conclusions: this study identifies behavioural determinants that underlie the actions of people with heart failure in their relationship with physical activity and potential intervention components for a novel intervention design to support this population. There is a lack of studies exploring health professionals’ and carers’ perspectives on this topic.
2044-6055
Duncan, Lorna
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Essery, Rosie
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Dawson, Shoba
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Ismail, Yasmin
d55f58fa-9303-4501-9e83-f1ad2ea40300
Baird, Justine
62d931d8-67a7-4b85-b703-19502c2beb17
Butcher, Karen
fb2b9fda-768d-4297-9000-9eabd2b47c1d
Whight, Emily
b675b7a8-97a8-4ac3-80aa-ff120d32b2c7
Johnson, Rachel
d17a1d3f-6229-45d4-953b-0043c09011de
Huntley, Alyson L.
7cd4b2ee-2e14-408d-ad5e-0391877ff9cb
Duncan, Lorna
69f40391-a0cc-496b-9f17-e03e8bb7db1c
Essery, Rosie
6bf53e81-577f-4a95-ba45-11aa64d1ee53
Dawson, Shoba
33f55aea-ba05-47e6-bbcf-f0395453fd1f
Ismail, Yasmin
d55f58fa-9303-4501-9e83-f1ad2ea40300
Baird, Justine
62d931d8-67a7-4b85-b703-19502c2beb17
Butcher, Karen
fb2b9fda-768d-4297-9000-9eabd2b47c1d
Whight, Emily
b675b7a8-97a8-4ac3-80aa-ff120d32b2c7
Johnson, Rachel
d17a1d3f-6229-45d4-953b-0043c09011de
Huntley, Alyson L.
7cd4b2ee-2e14-408d-ad5e-0391877ff9cb

Duncan, Lorna, Essery, Rosie, Dawson, Shoba, Ismail, Yasmin, Baird, Justine, Butcher, Karen, Whight, Emily, Johnson, Rachel and Huntley, Alyson L. (2025) What are the experiences of people with heart failure regarding participation in physical activity? A systematic review, meta-aggregation and development of a logic model. BMJ Open, 15 (4), [e092457]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-092457).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to (1) synthesise the experiences of people with heart failure and those who care for them concerning participation in physical activity (2) develop a logic model for a future intervention which will support people with heart failure to feel confident and safe in being physically active.

Design: to systematic review and meta-aggregation using Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) methodology.

Data sources: MEDLINE, Emcare and PsycINFO databases were searched through until June 2024 inclusively.

Eligibility criteria: studies with a qualitative design, including qualitative components of mixed-methods studies, which describe experiences of participation in physical activity by adults with chronic heart failure.

Data extraction and synthesis: two independent reviewers used standardised methods to search and screen studies. Data extraction included the PROGRESS-Plus items. The JBI checklist for qualitative studies was applied. Meta-aggregation guided by JBI methods was used to synthesise the data. This evidence, along with input from a patient and public involvement group, healthcare professionals and charity organisations, was used to develop a logic model.

Results We included 28 papers (25 studies) comprising 14 qualitative studies and 11 mixed-method studies describing the perspectives of 483 people with heart failure, 64 carers and 12 healthcare professionals.

The meta-aggregation produced seven synthesised findings describing the impact of physical symptoms, emotional factors, extrinsic factors, access to knowledge, self-motivation and peer/professional motivation and the positive impact of physical activity. The PROGRESS-PLUS tool identified significant inclusivity issues within the studies. The meta-aggregation with relevant contributor input informed behavioural determinants and potential intervention components of a logic model.

Conclusions: this study identifies behavioural determinants that underlie the actions of people with heart failure in their relationship with physical activity and potential intervention components for a novel intervention design to support this population. There is a lack of studies exploring health professionals’ and carers’ perspectives on this topic.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 March 2025
Published date: 5 April 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501029
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501029
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 40663e84-d154-4a8a-bceb-130f9a586104
ORCID for Rosie Essery: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2702-6951

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Date deposited: 20 May 2025 17:20
Last modified: 30 Aug 2025 01:47

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Contributors

Author: Lorna Duncan
Author: Rosie Essery ORCID iD
Author: Shoba Dawson
Author: Yasmin Ismail
Author: Justine Baird
Author: Karen Butcher
Author: Emily Whight
Author: Rachel Johnson
Author: Alyson L. Huntley

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