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Structured Walking and Chronic Institutionalized Schizophrenia Inmates: A pilot RCT Study on Quality of Life.

Global journal of health science
January 1, 1970
Siew Yim Loh et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine whether a structured walking intervention could improve quality of life, psychosocial functioning, and psychiatric symptoms in chronic schizophrenia patients.

Results Summary

The study found significant improvements in quality of life (SF-36), psychiatric symptoms (PANSS), and personal and social performance (PSP) in the walking intervention group compared to the treatment-as-usual group. The intervention group showed notable reductions in positive and negative symptoms and general psychopathology, along with enhanced physical and social functioning.

Population

Chronic schizophrenia patients (n=104) in a psychiatric institution.

Effective Dosage

Not specified (structured walking intervention).

Duration

3 months.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (17)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
structured walking intervention
increase
QOL (SF-36)
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
significant within group differences
#1
structured walking intervention
decrease
psychiatric symptoms (PANSS)
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
significant within group differences
#2
structured walking intervention
increase
personal and social performance (PSP)
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
significant within group differences
#3
structured walking intervention
increase
median SF-36 scores
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
statistically significant increase
#4
structured walking intervention
increase
physical functioning
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
increases shown
#5
structured walking intervention
increase
physical role limitations
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
increases shown
#6
structured walking intervention
increase
social functioning
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
increases shown
#7
structured walking intervention
decrease
median PANSS score
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
statistically significant reduction
#8
structured walking intervention
decrease
positive symptom
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
reduction
#9
structured walking intervention
decrease
negative symptom
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
reduction
#10
structured walking intervention
decrease
general psychopathology
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
reduction
#11
structured walking intervention
increase
median PSP score
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
statistically significant increase
#12
structured walking intervention
decrease
PANSS positive
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
significant between-group differences
#13
structured walking intervention
increase
SF36 Physical
Chronic patients with schizophrenia
-
significant between-group differences
#14
organized walking intervention
increase
functioning
long stayed chronic inmates
-
has the potential to bring improvement
#15
organized walking intervention
decrease
psychiatric symptoms
long stayed chronic inmates
-
has the potential to bring reduction
#16
organized walking intervention
increase
quality of Life
long stayed chronic inmates
-
has the potential to bring improvement
#17
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Lifestyle moderate-intensity physical activity can lower the risk of over twenty chronic health conditions, whilst inactivity reduces daily functioning and physical health of individuals living with schizophrenia. This study conducted in 2014 examines the effect of structured walking participation on QOL, psychosocial functioning and symptoms in Hospital Permai, one of the largest psychiatry institution in Asia METHOD: Chronic patients with schizophrenia (n=104) who met inclusion criteria were randomised to either a 3-month structured walking intervention or a treatment-as-usual arm. The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), global functioning (PSP) and QOL (SF-36) were measured at baseline and after the 3-month interval. RESULTS: At 3 month follow-up, there were significant within group differences in QOL (SF-36), psychiatric symptoms (PANSS), and personal and social performance (PSP). There were statistically significant increase in the median SF-36 scores, with increases shown in physical functioning (p<.001), physical role limitations (p<.05), social functioning (p<.01) in the intervention group compared to treatment-as-usual group. Statistically significant reduction of median PANSS score of the intervention group were noted in positive (p<0.001) and negative (p<0.01) symptom, and general psychopathology (p<0.01) scales. Statistically significant increase in the median PSP score (p<0.01) was found in the intervention group compared with the treatment-as-usual group. Between-group differences at post intervention (favouring Intervention) were significant for PANSS positive and SF36 Physical CONCLUSION: In long stayed chronic inmates, a simple but consistent, organized walking intervention has the potential to bring improvement in functioning, reduction in psychiatric symptoms and quality of Life. The emphasis of rehabilitation should target at lifestyle redesign intervention.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAgedFemaleHumansInpatientsMalaysiaMaleMiddle AgedPilot ProjectsQuality of LifeSchizophreniaTreatment OutcomeWalking
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations30
Citations/Year3.0
Relative Citation Ratio1.59
NIH Percentile67%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.72
Normalized Score0.69
Related Supplements
Structured Walking and Chronic Institutionalized Schizophren... | Panacea Index