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Factors Influencing Patient Enrollment in a Community-based Physical Activity Program After Healthcare Provider Referral: A Mixed Methods Study

Schumacher, Leah M.; Trilk, Jennifer L.; McNulty, Lia K.; Ylitalo, Kelly R.; Eskuri, Stephanie; Brooks, John M.; Estabrooks, Paul A.; Jindal, Meenu; Stoutenberg, Mark

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Authors

Leah M. Schumacher

Jennifer L. Trilk

Lia K. McNulty

Kelly R. Ylitalo

Stephanie Eskuri

John M. Brooks

Paul A. Estabrooks

Meenu Jindal



Abstract

Introduction and Objectives:
Structured physical activity (PA) programs help to prevent and manage chronic diseases, yet systematic approaches to identify and enroll patients in these programs are lacking. Exercise is Medicine Greenville (EIMG) is a novel clinic-to-community model that identifies patients with chronic diseases in primary care settings and connects them to a structured, evidence-informed, community-based PA program. This study assessed influences on PA program enrollment using a mixed methods design.

Methods:
Data were collected from 12 clinics over 18 months. Electronic health record data were used to quantitively compare the characteristics of referred patients who did versus did not enroll. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a subset of non-enrollees to elucidate barriers and facilitators to enrollment.

Results:
Of the 217 referred patients who were eligible, 84 (38.7%) enrolled in the PA program. A greater percentage of enrollees had a history of high cholesterol (73.8%) relative to non-enrollees (57.9%, χ2 (1, N = 217) = 5.66, P = .02). Twenty-six patients completed qualitative interviews. Three themes emerged from interviews: (1) positive referral experiences with opportunity for enhanced information sharing and improved flow; (2) strong patient motivation, perceived capability, and social support; and (3) external barriers, such as cost and time, that prevented enrollment.

Conclusions:
Findings can guide improvements to the EIMG model, thus increasing its positive impact on individual- and community-level health. Findings can also inform efforts to build similar clinic-to-community PA models at other health systems.

Citation

Schumacher, L. M., Trilk, J. L., McNulty, L. K., Ylitalo, K. R., Eskuri, S., Brooks, J. M., Estabrooks, P. A., Jindal, M., & Stoutenberg, M. (2024). Factors Influencing Patient Enrollment in a Community-based Physical Activity Program After Healthcare Provider Referral: A Mixed Methods Study. Journal of Primary Care & Community Health, 15, 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319241306710

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 21, 2024
Online Publication Date Dec 19, 2024
Publication Date 2024
Deposit Date Jan 16, 2025
Publicly Available Date Jan 16, 2025
Journal Journal of Primary Care & Community Health
Print ISSN 2150-1319
Electronic ISSN 2150-1327
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 15
Pages 1-10
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/21501319241306710
Keywords primary care, physical activity, mixed methods, chronic disease, decision making, electronic medical record
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3229538

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