Implementing exercise in cancer care_ study protocol to evaluate a community-based exercise program for people with cancer.pdf (1.1 MB)
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journal contribution
posted on 2021-12-22, 00:13 authored by P Cormie, S Lamb, RU Newton, L Valentine, S McKiernan, N Spry, D Joseph, DR Taaffe, Christopher DoranChristopher Doran, DA Galvï oBackground: Clinical research has established the efficacy of exercise in reducing treatment-related side-effects and increasing wellbeing in people with cancer. Major oncology organisations have identified the importance of incorporating exercise in comprehensive cancer care but information regarding effective approaches to translating evidence into practice is lacking. This paper describes the implementation of a community-based exercise program for people with cancer and the protocol for program evaluation. Methods/Design: The Life Now Exercise program is a community-based exercise intervention designed to mitigate and rehabilitate the adverse effects of cancer and its treatment and improve physical and psychosocial wellbeing in people with cancer. Involvement in the program is open to people with any diagnosis of cancer who are currently receiving treatment or within 2years of completing treatment. The 3-month intervention consists of twice weekly group-based exercise sessions administered in community exercise clinics under the supervision of exercise physiologists trained to deliver the program. Evaluation of the program involves measures of uptake, safety, adherence and effectiveness (including cost effectiveness) as assessed at the completion of the program and 6months follow-up. Discussion: To bridge the gap between research and practice, the Life Now Exercise program was designed and implemented to provide people with cancer access to evidence-based exercise medicine. The framework for program implementation and evaluation offers insight into the development of feasible, generalizable and sustainable supportive care services involving exercise. Community-based exercise programs specifically designed for people with cancer are necessary to facilitate adherence to international guidelines advising patients to participate in high-quality exercise. Trial Registration:ACTRN12616001669482(retrospectively registered 5 Dec 2016). 2017 The Author(s).
History
Volume
17Start Page
1End Page
10Number of Pages
10eISSN
1471-2407Publisher
BioMed Central, UKPublisher DOI
Additional Rights
CC-BY 4.0Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2017-01-27External Author Affiliations
University of Wollongong; Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Perth, WA; University of Queensland Centre for Clinical Research; Edith Cowan University; Australian Catholic UniversityEra Eligible
- Yes