Association among relevance, recommendation and motivation to the physical activity practice of health professionals
Oral Presentation C6.3
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14288/hfjc.v14i3.677Keywords:
Health System, Brief Advice, Physical ExerciseAbstract
Background: Practicing physical activity (PA) from a more autonomous motivation can favor the maintenance of PA practice and encourage health promotion behaviors. Purpose: To associate the relevance attributed to PA content, frequency of recommendation and PA time with the motivation for the practice of primary health care professionals (PHCP). Methods: The sample was comprising 107 PHCP from 22 health units in the city of Rio Claro, SP, Brazil, being 90.7% female, with a mean age of 39.94+9.42 years and working time of 7 years and 1 month. The BREQ-3 questionnaire was used to measure the motivation to practice PA, the IPAQ questionnaire for the PA time and closed questions to assess the relevance attributed to PA and frequency of recommendation by the PAPS. Motivation data were dichotomized from the group mean (more intrinsic and less intrinsic motivation) and PA from the recommendations (<149 min/week and >150min/week). The chi-square test was applied, adopting p=0.05. Results: Professionals who have a more internal motivation to practice PA tend to classify PA as “very important” (62% p=0.00). Classifying PA as “very important” has been associated with recommending more PA to the health users (73% p=0.00). Also, having the most intrinsic motivation was associated with values >150 min/week of PA (56% p=0.00). Conclusions: Suggesting strategies that encourage more internal motivation for the PA practice of PAPS can lead to health promotion actions and more time of PA. Funding: Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES).
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Copyright (c) 2021 Letícia A.C. Sposito, Joyce F. da Cruz, Eduardo Kokubun
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