Research highlights:

  • 4-STEPS yielded sustained small to moderate sustained effects on self-reported fatigue severity, impact, and health-related quality of life.
  • There were modest effects on physical activity. There were no significant effects on psychological and somatic distress.
  • Benefits on fatigue severity at 12 months were partially explained by physical activity goal progress.

Research abstract:

Objective: Examine the medium-term effects of a brief physical activity (PA) self-regulation (SR) based intervention (4-STEPS program) for chronic fatigue, and explore the mediating effects of PA related variables and SR skills.

Methods: A two-arm randomized controlled trial (Usual Care vs 4-STEPS) was carried out. The 4-STEPS program consisted of Motivational Interviewing and SR-skills training. Fatigue severity (primary outcome) and impact, PA, health-related quality of life (HrQoL), and somatic and psychological distress were assessed at baseline, post-treatment (12 weeks) and 12 months follow-up.

Results: Ninety-one patients (45 intervention and 46 controls) were included. At follow-up, there were significant treatment effects on fatigue severity (g = 0.72) and fatigue impact, leisure-time PA, and physical and psychological HrQoL. No significant effects were found for number of daily steps and somatic and psychological distress.

Fatigue severity at follow-up was partially mediated by post-treatment progress on a personal PA goal (effect ratio = 18%).

Conclusion: Results suggest that a brief intervention, focusing on the formulation and pursuit of personal PA goals and the use of SR skills, produces sustained benefits for fatigue severity. Despite these promising results, dropout was high and the intervention was not beneficial for all secondary outcomes.

Efficacy of a randomized controlled brief physical activity self-regulation intervention for chronic fatigue: Mediation effects of physical activity progress and self-regulation skills, by MM. Marques, V De Gucht, I. Leal, S. Maes in Journal of Psychosomatic research, [Published online: December 26, 2016]

 

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