Predicting physical activity and sarcopenia‐related health outcomes in women with rheumatoid arthritis: A test of the self‐determination theory

Author:

Kim Chun‐Ja1ORCID,Yun Hye‐Won2,Kang Hee Sun3ORCID,Jung Ju‐Yang4,Schlenk Elizabeth A5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Nursing and Research Institute of Nursing Science Ajou University Suwon South Korea

2. Department of Nursing Catholic Sangji College Andong South Korea

3. Red Cross College of Nursing Chung‐Ang University Seoul South Korea

4. Department of Rheumatology Ajou University School of Medicine Suwon South Korea

5. School of Nursing University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractAimThis study aimed to examine a hypothetical model of physical activity (PA) and health outcomes related to sarcopenia in women with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) based on self‐determination theory.DesignCross‐sectional study.MethodsThis study included 214 women diagnosed with RA from the outpatient rheumatology department of a university‐affiliated hospital in South Korea. Data were collected from September 2019 to August 2020 through structured questionnaires and anthropometric measurements and analysed using path analysis to test the hypothesized model. The primary health outcomes were perceived health status and sarcopenia‐related health (thigh circumference, handgrip strength and sarcopenia risk).ResultsThe final model's fit indices were adequate. Physical activity was directly affected by motivation for PA, while depression, self‐efficacy for PA, health care provider's autonomy support and basic psychological needs satisfaction indirectly affected PA. Physical activity directly affected perceived health status and thigh circumference, while perceived sarcopenia risk and handgrip strength were directly affected by disease activity and age.Patient or Public ContributionPatients were involved in a questionnaire‐based survey.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Nursing

Reference71 articles.

1. Sarcopenia and Other Chronic Organ Diseases

2. Arthritis Foundation. (2020).Arthritis by the numbers. Retrieved fromhttps://www.arthritis.org/getmedia/73a9f02d‐7f91‐4084‐91c3‐0ed0b11c5814/abtn‐2020‐final.pdf

3. Age-associated decline of muscle mass, grip strength and gait speed: A 4-year longitudinal study of 3018 community-dwelling older Chinese

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