Exercise is medicine? Most of the time for most; but not always for all

Abstract Based on extensive research on the relationship between exercise and health, exercise as a form of medicine is a powerful concept of growing popularity within health care, academia and policy. Proponents of this exercise is medicine (EiM) movement frame exercise as a panacea for a variety of health issues and uncritically promote exercise as good for all. Two clinical populations particularly influenced by the EiM agenda are spinal cord injury (SCI) and arthritis. The purpose of this research was to explore how individuals with SCI and arthritis personally make sense of their exercise experiences. Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with 10 participants with SCI and 20 participants with arthritis. Following a thematic narrative analysis, three patterns were identified across the whole data-set. These were: (1) exercise and restitution; (2) exercise and pain; and (3) exercise and pleasure. Taken together, these results provide new knowledge regarding the impact of exercise that both align with, and contrast, the dominant EiM discourse. When exercise is perceived as ‘medicine’, stories of exercise participation spoke of cure, and restitution, rather than health and well-being. Pain was an unwelcomed side effect of exercise participation for some, and had a detrimental impact upon motivation and engagement. Lastly, a focus upon the medicinal benefits of exercise did not reflect the multiple pleasures experienced through exercise participation. Thus, health professionals, academics and policy-makers need to prescribe to more ethical forms of exercise promotion that may lead to more efficacious, person-sensitive interventions.

[1]  K. McGannon,et al.  The Psychology of Sub-Culture in Sport and Physical Activity : Critical perspectives , 2014 .

[2]  V. Schmidt Discursive Institutionalism: The Explanatory Power of Ideas and Discourse , 2008 .

[3]  W. Ressler,et al.  On being responsible: ethical issues in appeals to personal responsibility in health campaigns. , 2001, Journal of health communication.

[4]  P. Painter,et al.  A Randomized Controlled Trial of Home-Based Exercise for Cancer-Related Fatigue in Women During and After Chemotherapy With or Without Radiation Therapy , 2010, Cancer nursing.

[5]  Brett Smith,et al.  The barriers, benefits and facilitators of leisure time physical activity among people with spinal cord injury: a meta-synthesis of qualitative findings , 2014, Health psychology review.

[6]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Exercise Is a Many-Splendored Thing, but for Some It Does Not Feel So Splendid: Staging a Resurgence of Hedonistic Ideas in the Quest to Understand Exercise Behavior , 2012 .

[7]  M. Iversen,et al.  Recommendations and the state of the evidence for physical activity interventions for adults with rheumatoid arthritis: 2007 to present. , 2012, International journal of clinical rheumatology.

[8]  Sulin Cheng,et al.  Physical activity continuum throughout the lifespan: Is exercise medicine or what? , 2016, Journal of sport and health science.

[9]  Brett Smith,et al.  Physical activity promotion for people with spinal cord injury: physiotherapists’ beliefs and actions , 2018, Disability and rehabilitation.

[10]  J. Hootman,et al.  Effects of community‐deliverable exercise on pain and physical function in adults with arthritis and other rheumatic diseases: A meta‐analysis , 2011, Arthritis care & research.

[11]  Penny Flaxman The 10-minute appointment. , 2015, The British journal of general practice : the journal of the Royal College of General Practitioners.

[12]  J. Isaacs,et al.  The need for personalised medicine for rheumatoid arthritis , 2010, Annals of the rheumatic diseases.

[13]  Arthur W. Frank,et al.  Letting Stories Breathe: A Socio-Narratology , 2010 .

[14]  U. Ekelund,et al.  Global physical activity levels: surveillance progress, pitfalls, and prospects , 2012, The Lancet.

[15]  Carol Thomas,et al.  Theorising disability and chronic illness: Where next for perspectives in medical sociology? , 2012 .

[16]  A. Behrman,et al.  Thinking Through Every Step: How People With Spinal Cord Injuries Relearn to Walk , 2013, Qualitative health research.

[17]  Walter R. Thompson,et al.  WORLDWIDE SURVEY OF FITNESS TRENDS FOR 2018: The CREP Edition , 2017 .

[18]  A. Soundy,et al.  A qualitative study in neurological physiotherapy and hope: Beyond physical improvement , 2010, Physiotherapy theory and practice.

[19]  J. Coveney,et al.  In Pursuit of the Study of Pleasure: Implications for Health Research and Practice , 2003 .

[20]  D. Lupton Quantifying the body: monitoring and measuring health in the age of mHealth technologies , 2013 .

[21]  Brett Smith,et al.  Qualitative Research Methods in Sport, Exercise and Health: From process to product , 2013, QMiP Bulletin.

[22]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  AFFECT-BASED EXERCISE PRESCRIPTION: An Idea Whose Time Has Come? , 2017 .

[23]  Sue Lasiter,et al.  Oncology Nurses’ Narratives About Ethical Dilemmas and Prognosis-Related Communication in Advanced Cancer Patients , 2013, Cancer nursing.

[24]  J. Berryman,et al.  Exercise is Medicine: A Historical Perspective , 2010, Current sports medicine reports.

[25]  S. Morrison,et al.  Activity-based therapy for recovery of walking in chronic spinal cord injury: results from a secondary analysis to determine responsiveness to therapy. , 2014, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[26]  Brett W. Smith Narrative analysis in sport and exercise: how can it be done? , 2016 .

[27]  Oli Williams Identifying adverse effects of area‐based health policy: An ethnographic study of a deprived neighbourhood in England , 2017, Health & place.

[28]  A. Latimer-Cheung,et al.  A systematic review of review articles addressing factors related to physical activity participation among children and adults with physical disabilities , 2016, Health psychology review.

[29]  R. Pringle,et al.  The politics of pleasure: an ethnographic examination exploring the dominance of the multi-activity sport-based physical education model , 2017 .

[30]  P. Jacobs,et al.  Exercise Recommendations for Individuals with Spinal Cord Injury , 2004, Sports medicine.

[31]  S. Fullagar Diffracting mind-body relations: Feminist materialism and the entanglement of physical culture in women’s recovery from depression , 2017 .

[32]  Brett Smith,et al.  Men, spinal cord injury, memories and the narrative performance of pain , 2008 .

[33]  Sigridur Halldorsdottir,et al.  Facilitators and Barriers to Exercising Among People With Osteoarthritis: A Phenomenological Study , 2010, Physical Therapy.

[34]  S. L. Stover,et al.  Pain in patients with spinal cord injury. , 1979, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[35]  R. Sallis Exercise is medicine: a call to action for physicians to assess and prescribe exercise , 2015, The Physician and sportsmedicine.

[36]  J. Burridge,et al.  Exploring positive adjustment in people with spinal cord injury , 2014, Journal of health psychology.

[37]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  Invited Guest Editorial: Envisioning the next fifty years of research on the exercise–affect relationship , 2013 .

[38]  S. Athar Principles of Biomedical Ethics , 2011, The Journal of IMA.

[39]  Sara Wilcox,et al.  Perceived exercise barriers, enablers, and benefits among exercising and nonexercising adults with arthritis: results from a qualitative study. , 2006, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[40]  R. Rhodes,et al.  Can the Affective Response to Exercise Predict Future Motives and Physical Activity Behavior? A Systematic Review of Published Evidence , 2015, Annals of behavioral medicine : a publication of the Society of Behavioral Medicine.

[41]  S. Weiss,et al.  Narrative Medicine: Honoring the Stories of Illness , 2007, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[42]  Brett Smith,et al.  Disability and the gym: experiences, barriers and facilitators of gym use for individuals with physical disabilities , 2017, Disability and rehabilitation.

[43]  B. Wansink,et al.  Is it fun or exercise? The framing of physical activity biases subsequent snacking , 2014 .

[44]  J. Jordan,et al.  A systematic review of recommendations and guidelines for the management of osteoarthritis: The chronic osteoarthritis management initiative of the U.S. bone and joint initiative. , 2014, Seminars in arthritis and rheumatism.

[45]  R. Hinman,et al.  Exercise in osteoarthritis: moving from prescription to adherence. , 2014, Best practice & research. Clinical rheumatology.

[46]  Brett Smith,et al.  Understanding physical activity participation in spinal cord injured populations: Three narrative types for consideration , 2015, International journal of qualitative studies on health and well-being.

[47]  R. Neville Exercise is medicine: some cautionary remarks in principle as well as in practice , 2012, Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy.

[48]  I. Demmelmaier,et al.  “A gift from heaven” or “This was not for me”. A mixed methods approach to describe experiences of participation in an outsourced physical activity program for persons with rheumatoid arthritis , 2015, Clinical Rheumatology.

[49]  Margaret R. Somers The narrative constitution of identity: A relational and network approach , 1994 .

[50]  Andy Smith Exercise is recreation not medicine , 2016, Journal of sport and health science.

[51]  K. Tamminen,et al.  No emotion is an island: an overview of theoretical perspectives and narrative research on emotions in sport and physical activity , 2017 .

[52]  Grace Ng,et al.  Development of an Automated Healthcare Kiosk for the Management of Chronic Disease Patients in the Primary Care Setting , 2016, Journal of Medical Systems.

[53]  Matthias Egger,et al.  Domains of physical activity and all-cause mortality: systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis of cohort studies. , 2011, International journal of epidemiology.

[54]  Beccy Watson,et al.  The Palgrave Handbook of Feminism and Sport, Leisure and Physical Education , 2017 .

[55]  Simi Rahman,et al.  Humanity before Science: Narrative Medicine, Clinical Practice, and Medical Education. , 2013, The Permanente journal.

[56]  K. Spink,et al.  Physical activity in women with arthritis: examining perceived barriers and self-regulatory efficacy to cope. , 2009, Arthritis and rheumatism.

[57]  D. Wolfe,et al.  Effects of exercise on fitness and health of adults with spinal cord injury , 2017, Neurology.

[58]  A. Lane,et al.  Death by effectiveness: exercise as medicine caught in the efficacy trap! , 2015, British Journal of Sports Medicine.

[59]  S Holm,et al.  Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 5th edn. , 2002 .

[60]  S. Fullagar,et al.  Feminist Theories of Emotion and Affect in Sport , 2018 .

[61]  J. Goesling,et al.  Pain and Depression: An Integrative Review of Neurobiological and Psychological Factors , 2013, Current Psychiatry Reports.

[62]  A. Sparkes,et al.  Interviews: qualitative interviewing in the sport and exercise sciences , 2016 .

[63]  M. Koelen,et al.  Nutrition and physical activity guidance practices in general practice: a critical review. , 2013, Patient education and counseling.

[64]  Brett Smith,et al.  Men, sport, spinal cord injury, and narratives of hope. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[65]  Anthony Papathomas Narrative inquiry: from cardinal to marginal . . . and back? , 2016 .

[66]  C. Phoenix,et al.  The Multidimensionality of Pleasure in Later Life Physical Activity , 2015 .

[67]  P. Ekkekakis,et al.  The Pleasure and Displeasure People Feel When they Exercise at Different Intensities , 2011, Sports medicine.

[68]  K. M. Martin Ginis,et al.  Participant experiences and perceptions of physical activity-enhancing interventions for people with physical impairments and mobility limitations: a meta-synthesis of qualitative research evidence , 2017, Health psychology review.

[69]  A. Latimer-Cheung,et al.  Narrative environments and the capacity of disability narratives to motivate leisure-time physical activity among individuals with spinal cord injury , 2013, Disability and rehabilitation.

[70]  James A. Holstein,et al.  Analyzing Narrative Reality , 1988 .

[71]  T. Lindberg,et al.  Effects of an exercise programme on musculoskeletal and neuropathic pain after spinal cord injury—results from a seated double-poling ergometer study , 2012, Spinal Cord.

[72]  K. Howe Positivist Dogmas, Rhetoric, and the Education Science Question , 2009 .

[73]  T. Kay Bodies of knowledge: connecting the evidence bases on physical activity and health inequalities , 2016 .

[74]  B. Saltin,et al.  Exercise as medicine – evidence for prescribing exercise as therapy in 26 different chronic diseases , 2015, Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports.

[75]  Molly Andrews,et al.  Counter-narratives and the power to oppose , 2002 .

[76]  S. Best The social construction of pain: an evaluation , 2007 .

[77]  Jennifer B. Gray The power of storytelling: Using narrative in the healthcare context , 2009 .

[78]  A. Hutber,et al.  The Exercise is Medicine Global Health Initiative: a 2014 update , 2014, British Journal of Sports Medicine.

[79]  Exercise for health: Serious fun for the whole person? , 2016, Journal of sport and health science.

[80]  Darrell P. Rowbottom,et al.  Kuhn vs. Popper on criticism and dogmatism in science: a resolution at the group level , 2011 .

[81]  J. Thom,et al.  Benefits of Exercise in Rheumatoid Arthritis , 2011, Journal of aging research.

[82]  A. Woolf,et al.  The need to address the burden of musculoskeletal conditions. , 2012, Best practice & research. Clinical rheumatology.

[83]  Lynda Gettings Psychological well-being in rheumatoid arthritis: a review of the literature. , 2010, Musculoskeletal care.

[84]  Seema Vyas,et al.  How does economic empowerment affect women's risk of intimate partner violence in low and middle income countries? A systematic review of published evidence , 2009 .

[85]  I-Min Lee,et al.  Epidemiology of Physical Activity and Exercise Training in the United States. , 2017, Progress in cardiovascular diseases.

[86]  H. Dawes,et al.  Patient's expression of hope and illness narratives in three neurological conditions: a meta-ethnography , 2013 .

[87]  I. Burkitt,et al.  Emotions and Social Relations , 2014 .

[88]  D. Wolfe,et al.  Greater daily leisure time physical activity is associated with lower chronic disease risk in adults with spinal cord injury. , 2009, Applied physiology, nutrition, and metabolism = Physiologie appliquee, nutrition et metabolisme.

[89]  C. Phoenix,et al.  Pleasure: a forgotten dimension of physical activity in older age. , 2014, Social science & medicine.

[90]  M. Larsson,et al.  Patients with chronic pain may need extra support when prescribed physical activity in primary care: a qualitative study , 2017, Scandinavian journal of primary health care.

[91]  M. Perrier,et al.  Disability, sport, and impaired bodies : A critical approach , 2014 .