Article

An Australian Football Themed Health Behaviour Change Intervention for Men With Cardiovascular Disease is Feasible and Acceptable: Results From a Feasibility Randomised Trial

Details

Citation

Smith BJ, Maiorana A, Ntoumanis N, McVeigh JA, McCaffrey TA, Kerr DA, Hillis G, Wright H, Ng H, Legrand S, Donald F, Hunt K, McDonald MD & Quested E (2024) An Australian Football Themed Health Behaviour Change Intervention for Men With Cardiovascular Disease is Feasible and Acceptable: Results From a Feasibility Randomised Trial. Heart, Lung and Circulation, 33 (9), pp. 1365-1378. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2024.03.012

Abstract
Background Physical activity (PA) and weight management are critical for cardiovascular disease (CVD) secondary prevention. However, PA adherence during or after cardiac rehabilitation is low. Here, we assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Australian football-themed Aussie Fans in Training (Aussie-FIT) program and associated trial procedures when adapted for men with CVD. Method A pragmatic randomised control trial, with waitlist control arm, and follow-up measures at 3 and 6 months. Men with a CVD diagnosis and body mass index ≥25 kg/m2 were recruited from community and clinical settings, and randomised, following baseline measures of health and health behaviours. The intervention arm attended 12 face-to-face football-themed education and PA sessions. Feasibility (recruitment, retention, attendance, and adherence to trial procedures) was assessed via mixed methods. Results A total of 74% (64/86) of participants expressing interest met the eligibility criteria. Of those, 49 men (mean age=61.4, standard deviation=9.5, mean body mass index=31.3, standard deviation=4.2) were randomised. Program attendance rates (87% attended ≥80% of sessions) and retention (92%) were high. Trial retention at the primary end point (3 months) was high (86%) and at the 6-month follow-ups reduced to 67%. Program and trial procedures were acceptable, except for the request to visit a pathologist for the blood draw. Conclusions Using a football theme and setting may be a feasible way to engage men with CVD in health behaviour change. Given the existing pilot evidence for men at risk of CVD, and that recruitment rates were under the target, trialling a program for men with or at risk of CVD is recommended.

Keywords
Cardiovascular disease; Physical activity; Weight management; Obesity; Feasibility

Journal
Heart, Lung and Circulation: Volume 33, Issue 9

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2024
Publication date online31/05/2024
Date accepted by journal25/03/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36379
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN1443-9506
eISSN1444-2892

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Professor Kate Hunt

Professor Kate Hunt

Professor, Institute for Social Marketing

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