pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

A Longitudinal Observational Study of Multimorbidity and Partner Support for Physical Activity Among People with Osteoarthritis - PubMed

Observational Study

A Longitudinal Observational Study of Multimorbidity and Partner Support for Physical Activity Among People with Osteoarthritis

Katrina R Ellis et al. Int J Behav Med. 2021 Dec.

Abstract

Background: Physical activity can improve osteoarthritis-related symptoms; however, many people with osteoarthritis (PWOA) are insufficiently active. Social support for physical activity from an intimate partner can help PWOA increase activity, but managing multiple, chronic physical or mental health conditions (i.e., multimorbidity) may influence provision and receipt of that support.

Method: Data from a 1-year longitudinal observational study was used to examine associations between multimorbidity and three dimensions of partner support for physical activity-companionship partner support (doing activity together), enacted partner support, and social support effectiveness-in 169 insufficiently active PWOA and their partners.

Results: Multivariable-adjusted multi-level models indicated baseline differences in support by multimorbidity status: when partners had multimorbidity, PWOA reported receiving less companionship support and less effective support from partners; when PWOA had multimorbidity, partners reported providing less enacted support and both partners and PWOA reported less effective partner support. Broad trends (p < .05) indicate initial increases and subsequent decreases in companionship and enacted partner support when PWOA had multimorbidity, and among partners with and without multimorbidity. When PWOA had multimorbidity, an initial increase in support effectiveness was followed by no significant change; a similar trend was seen among partners with and without multimorbidity.

Conclusion: Multimorbidity may generally contribute to less partner support for physical activity or less effective support, although influences on support over time are less clear. Physical activity interventions for couples experiencing multimorbidity would likely benefit from attention to the impact of multiple chronic health conditions on physical activity and physical activity-related partner support.

Keywords: Couples; Dyad; Multimorbidity; Osteoarthritis; Physical activity; Social support.

© 2021. International Society of Behavioral Medicine.

PubMed Disclaimer

Similar articles

References

    1. Barbour KE, Helmick CG, Boring M, Brady TJ. Vital signs: prevalence of doctor-diagnosed arthritis and arthritis-attributable activity limitation—United States, 2013–2015. MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report. 2017;66(9):246. - PMC - PubMed
    1. Prevention CfDCa. Osteoarthritis (OA). 2018.
    1. Kim C, Linsenmeyer KD, Vlad SC, et al. Prevalence of Radiographic and Symptomatic Hip Osteoarthritis in an Urban United States Community: The Framingham Osteoarthritis Study. Arthritis & Rheumatology. 2014;66(11):3013–7. doi:10.1002/art.38795 - DOI - PMC - PubMed
    1. Lawrence RC, Felson DT, Helmick CG, et al. Estimates of the prevalence of arthritis and other rheumatic conditions in the United States. Part II. Arthritis and Rheumatology. 2008;58(1):26–35. doi:10.1002/art.23176 - DOI - PMC - PubMed
    1. Buckwalter J Evidence for overuse/overloading of joints in the genesis and progression of osteoarthritis: Part II. Current Orthopaedics. 1996;10(4):220–4.

Publication types

MeSH terms

LinkOut - more resources