Does the BE-FIT intervention improve exercise sensitivity and physical activity in low active patients enrolled in cardiac rehabilitation?
19 low active patients with elevated exercise sensitivity enrolled in outpatient cardiac rehabilitation (mean age 70.7 years).
BE-FIT (Behavioral Exposure For Interoceptive Tolerance), a 6-session, manualized, program-adjunctive treatment delivered during the initial weeks of cardiac rehabilitation involving exposure to feared bodily sensations and exercise situations.
Activity monitoring-only control.
Feasibility, safety, and initial efficacy (exercise sensitivity, average steps/day, and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity [MVPA] mins/day) from baseline to end-of-treatment.patient reported
An ACT-informed exposure intervention (BE-FIT) is safe, feasible, and shows preliminary efficacy in reducing exercise sensitivity and increasing physical activity in older adults undergoing cardiac rehabilitation.
Exercise sensitivity, fear of physical sensations of exertion, is particularly elevated in individuals with cardiovascular disease and can promote fear-avoidance of physical activity. We developed an ACT-informed exposure intervention to target exercise sensitivity, called Behavioral Exposure For Interoceptive Tolerance (BE-FIT). In this Stage I pilot trial, we developed and evaluated the feasibility, safety, and initial efficacy of BE-FIT in low active patients with elevated exercise sensitivity enrolled in outpatient cardiac rehabilitation. BE-FIT is a 6-session, manualized, program-adjunctive treatment delivered during the initial weeks of cardiac rehabilitation and involves exposure to feared bodily sensations and exercise situations, bolstered by acceptance and values-focused processes. Patients (Mage = 70.7 years) were assigned to BE-FIT (n = 12) or an activity monitoring-only control (n = 7). Patients in the BE-FIT condition reported high satisfaction, completed 100% of sessions, and 86.3% (SD = 16.4%) of homework exposures. There were no adverse events reported. BE-FIT produced large-sized effects on reductions in exercise sensitivity and increases in both average steps/day and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) mins/day, from baseline to end-of-treatment. In contrast, the monitoring-only cohort evidenced small-sized reductions in exercise sensitivity and no change in average steps/day or MVPA mins/day. BE-FIT is safe, feasible, acceptable with promising findings from this Stage I trial.
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Farris et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc6f0a24e766dc313592de — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/16506073.2022.2037017
Samantha G. Farris
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Mindy M. Kibbey
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
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