Informing behaviour change intervention design using systematic review with Bayesian meta-analysis: physical activity in heart failure

Aliya Amirova, Lauren Taylor, Brittannia Volkmer, Nafiso Ahmed, Angel Chater, Theodora Fteropoulli

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
95 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Embracing the Bayesian approach, we aimed to synthesise evidence regarding barriers and enablers to physical activity in adults with heart failure (HF) to inform behaviour change intervention. This approach helps estimate and quantify the uncertainty in the evidence and facilitates the synthesis of qualitative and quantitative studies. Qualitative evidence was annotated using the Theoretical Domains Framework and represented as a prior distribution using an expert elicitation task. The maximum a posteriori probability (MAP) for the probability distribution for the log OR was used to estimate the relationship between physical activity and each determinant according to qualitative, quantitative, and qualitative and quantitative evidence combined. The probability distribution dispersion (SD) was used to evaluate uncertainty in the evidence. Three qualitative and 16 quantitative studies were included (N = 2739). High pro-b-type natriuretic peptide (MAP = −1.16; 95%CrI: [−1.21; −1.11]) and self-reported symptoms (MAP = − 0.48; 95%CrI: [−0.40; −0.55]) were suggested as barriers to physical activity with low uncertainty (SD = 0.18 and 0.19, respectively). Modifiable barriers were symptom distress (MAP = −0.46; 95%CrI: [−0.68; −0.24], SD = 0.36), and negative attitude (MAP = −0.40; 95%CrI: [−0.49; −0.31], SD = 0.26). Modifiable enablers were social support (MAP = 0.56; 95%CrI: [0.48; 0.63], SD = 0.26), self-efficacy (MAP = 0.43; 95%CrI: [0.32; 0.54], SD = 0.37), positive physical activity attitude (MAP = 0.92; 95%CrI: [0.77; 1.06], SD = 0.36).

Original languageEnglish
JournalHealth Psychology Review
Early online date23 Jun 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Aug 2022

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Informing behaviour change intervention design using systematic review with Bayesian meta-analysis: physical activity in heart failure'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this