Adherence to Home-Based Exercises in Musculoskeletal Disorders
Adherence to Home-Based Exercise Programs Among Patients With Musculoskeletal Disorders and Its Influencing Factors
Konya Beyhekim Training and Research Hospital
252 participants
Dec 30, 2024
OBSERVATIONAL
Conditions
Summary
Home exercise program is recommended by physicians to patients and their relatives to do at home and It is a treatment option in which the physician describes how to do it. Home workout program to be completed at home to complement and reinforce their program in the clinic It is a personalized set of therapeutic exercises that are taught. There are factors that can change exercise compliance; There are some reasons why some patients adhere to the prescribed home exercise program and others do not. Adherence to home exercises is a major issue in rehabilitation and the reasons for this are multifactorial; It includes both psychological and specific conditions factors that vary between each individual and these conditions should be taken into account by clinicians in designing personalized exercise programs. Home exercise programs constitute a fundamental component of rehabilitation and are widely prescribed by physicians support therapeutic gains beyond the clinical environment. These individualized programs aim to maintain functional improvements, reduce symptoms, and promote self-management among individuals with musculoskeletal disorders. Although adherence to home-based exercises is recognized as a key determinant of rehabilitation outcomes, non-adherence remains a persistent challenge. Despite growing emphasis on the importance of exercise compliance, the existing literature provides relatively limited and insufficient evidence regarding the factors that influence adherence across different musculoskeletal conditions, including degenerative, orthopedic, and neurological disorders. Addressing this gap, the present prospective longitudinal cohort study aims to evaluate adherence to individualized home-based exercise programs among patients with diverse musculoskeletal conditions and to determine whether adherence behaviors differ across diagnostic groups. In addition, the study seeks to identify demographic, clinical, psychosocial, and functional factors associated with exercise compliance. By integrating structured clinical evaluations with validated outcome measures, this study aims not only to clarify the determinants of exercise adherence but also to contribute to the development of more effective, condition-specific strategies to enhance sustained engagement in home-based rehabilitation.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria4
- Be 18 years of age or older
- To have a musculoskeletal disease (degenerative, neurological or orthopedic)
- To be given a home exercise program
- To have cognitive and language functions to communicate, to be a volunteer
Exclusion Criteria4
- Those with major psychiatric illness
- Those with cognitive dysfunction
- Those with communication disorders, reluctant/reluctant to participate
- Those with any condition other than a primary degenerative, orthopedic, or neurological disease that could significantly affect exercise adherence, including musculoskeletal or systemic disorders (e.g., severe anemia, heart failure, respiratory failure, uncontrolled diabetes, inflammatory rheumatic disease, recent fractures, or active infections).
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Interventions
Patients with chronic degenerative musculoskeletal disorders receiving a home exercise program
Patients receiving a home exercise program as part of post-operative orthopedic rehabilitation
Patients receiving a home exercise program following a neurological condition (stroke,hemiplegia) as part of rehabilitation
Locations(1)
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NCT07261553