Interventions aimed at promoting physical activity in people with asthma could improve their symptoms and quality of life โ€“ according to new research from the University of East Anglia.

Researchers looked at whether interventions such as aerobic and strength or resistance training, had helped participants with asthma.

Although they found that these interventions worked, patients with asthma may have had difficulty undertaking them because of their difficulty travelling to fitness groups or because the interventions were not suitable for people with additional health conditions.


Processingโ€ฆ
Success! You're on the list.

But the team say that digital interventions โ€“ such as video appointments, smartwatches and mobile apps โ€“ could remove some of these barriers and enable patients to carry out home-based programmes in future.

Prof Andrew Wilson, from UEAโ€™s Norwich Medical School, said: โ€œBeing physically active is widely recommended for people with asthma. Doing more than 150 minutes a week of moderate to vigorous physical activity has extensive benefits including improved lung function and asthma control.

Exclusive Sci-Tee only at Scientific Inquirer! SCIENCE. MAKES. LIFE. BETTER. (Dancing).

โ€œBut research has shown that people living with asthma engage in less physical activity and are more sedentary than people without asthma.

โ€œWe wanted to find out whether interventions – such as being asked to perform aerobic exercise a few times a week in group sessions, together with โ€˜goal settingโ€™ – are effective in helping people with asthma be more active.โ€

The team studied interventions that were designed to promote physical activity in adults with asthma. They looked at 25 separate studies from around the world involving 1,849 participants with asthma, to see whether their symptoms and quality of life were changed thanks to the interventions.

Postgraduate researcher Leanne Tyson, also from UEAโ€™s Norwich Medical School said: โ€œWe found that interventions that promote physical activity had significant benefits in terms of increasing physical activity, decreasing time spent sedentary, improving quality of life, and decreasing asthma symptoms.

โ€œThis is really important because helping patients make significant behaviour changes could really improve their outcomes in the long term.

โ€œOur review also highlights the potential use of digital interventions, which were notably absent.

โ€œThis is important now more than ever as patients have not been able to attend face-to-face support during the Covid-19 pandemic, and services will likely become overwhelmed. Therefore, alternative interventions and methods of delivery need to be considered.โ€

This study was funded by the Asthma UK Centre For Applied Research.

โ€˜A Systematic Review of the Characteristics of Interventions that Promote Physical Activity in Adults with Asthmaโ€™ is published in the Journal of Health Psychology.

IMAGE CREDIT: (ENTER NAMES)


Universe expansion still accelerating say astronomers
Astronomers confirm the universe's expansion is accelerating as previously established, refuting claims …
Social media use linked to poorer mental health in early adolescence
Adolescents using social media over two hours daily face higher depression risks, …
From dusk till dawn
Astronomers, using the James Webb Space Telescope, found temperature and chemical differences …
Understanding how brain aneurysms form may help predict ruptures
A UC San Francisco study reveals key brain cell interactions that weaken …

One response to “How exercise interventions could help people with asthma.”

  1. This is so informative and factful. Whenever it comes to asthma, exercise is not entertained. But after reading this so many things become clearer, how physical exercise is required.

    Thanks for sharing!

Leave a Reply

Trending

Discover more from Scientific Inquirer

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading