13 results on '"Brittain DR"'
Search Results
2. From Practice to Publication: The Promise of Writing Workshops.
- Author
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Lavinghouze SR, Kettel Khan L, Auld ME, Sammons Hackett D, Brittain DR, Brown DR, Greaney E, Harris DM, Maynard LM, Onufrak S, Robillard AG, Schwartz R, Siddique S, Youngner CG, Wright LS, and O'Toole TP
- Subjects
- Humans, United States, Health Promotion, Public Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S., Writing, Curriculum
- Abstract
Practitioners in health departments, university extension programs, and nonprofit organizations working in public health face varied challenges to publishing in the peer-reviewed literature. These practitioners may lack time, support, skills, and efficacy needed for manuscript submission, which keeps them from sharing their wisdom and experience-based evidence. This exclusion can contribute to literature gaps, a failure of evidence-based practice to inform future research, reduced ability to educate partners, and delays in advancing public health practice. Our article describes the writing workshops offered to Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity (DNPAO), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funded programs in 2021. This project consisted of three 60-minute introductory writing webinars open to all recipients, followed by a Writing for Publications workshop, an 8- to 9-week virtual learning/writing intensive for selected writing team applicants. The Society for Public Health Education staff, consultants, and CDC/DNPAO staff developed, refined, and presented the curriculum. The workshop for public health practitioner writing teams was offered to two cohorts and included extensive coaching and focused on potential submission to a Health Promotion Practice supplement, "Reducing Chronic Disease through Physical Activity and Nutrition: Public Health Practice in the Field" (see Supplemental Material), which was supported by CDC/DNPAO. We describe the webinars, the workshop design, modifications, evaluation methods and results.
- Published
- 2022
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3. Differences in Resilience Mechanisms and Physical Activity among Women Experiencing Chronic Pain with Higher or Lower Resilience.
- Author
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Brittain DR, Gyurcsik NC, Cary MA, Moser EN, and Davis LS
- Subjects
- Adult, Exercise, Female, Humans, Self Efficacy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Chronic Pain
- Abstract
Background: Chronic pain is a public health issue, with women being disproportionately impacted. Progressing from light physical activity to the recommended moderate to vigorous intensities is effective for chronic pain self-management, yet participation is low among women experiencing chronic pain. Researchers studying resilience approaches to chronic pain contend that women with higher resilience, or functioning well despite adverse life stressors including chronic pain, should have better resilience mechanisms and more physical activity participation. The purpose of this work was to examine whether women experiencing chronic pain, reporting higher versus lower resilience, differed in resilience mechanisms (pain acceptance, self-regulatory efficacy to overcome pain and related barriers to activity, and self-regulatory efficacy to schedule and plan activity) and physical activity (light, moderate-vigorous)., Methods: Adult women experiencing chronic pain (N = 269; M
age = 38.35, SD = 13.13 years) completed an online survey assessing study variables., Results: A multivariate analysis of covariance comparing participants with higher (n = 131) and lower (n = 138) resilience, controlling for age and pain intensity, was significant (p < .001; η2 partial = .17). Participants with higher resilience reported significantly higher pain acceptance, self-regulatory efficacy beliefs, and moderate-vigorous physical activity (p's < .01; η2 partial = .03 to .14, small to large effects). Light activity did not differ., Conclusions: Novel findings illustrated that participants with higher resilience exhibited more favorable resilience mechanisms and participation in the recommended moderate-vigorous activity. If intervening among women with lower resilience to improve their resilience mechanisms and moderate-vigorous activity is effective, then intervention adoption and delivery across communities could promote improved pain self-management among women., (Copyright © 2021 Jacobs Institute of Women's Health, George Washington University. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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4. A proof-of-concept study on the impact of a chronic pain and physical activity training workshop for exercise professionals.
- Author
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Gyurcsik NC, Tupper SM, Brittain DR, Brawley LR, Cary MA, Ratcliffe-Smith D, Blouin JE, Marchant MG, Sessford JD, Hellsten LM, Arnold BE, and Downe P
- Subjects
- Adult, Exercise, Exercise Therapy, Humans, Middle Aged, Self Efficacy, Surveys and Questionnaires, Chronic Pain therapy
- Abstract
Objectives: Physical activity is essential for long-term chronic pain management, yet individuals struggle to participate. Exercise professionals, including fitness instructors, and personal trainers, are preferred delivery agents for education and instruction on chronic pain, physical activity, and strategies to use adherence-promoting behavioral skills. However, exercise professionals receive no relevant training during certification or continuing education opportunities to effectively support their participants living with chronic pain. Based on the ORBIT model for early pre-efficacy phases of development and testing of new behavioral treatments, the present Phase IIa proof-of-concept study was conducted. The purpose was to examine the impacts of a newly developed chronic pain and physical activity training workshop on psychosocial outcomes among exercise professionals. Outcomes included knowledge and attitudes regarding chronic pain, attitudes and beliefs about the relationship between pain and impairment, and self-efficacy to educate and instruct participants with chronic pain., Methods: Forty-eight exercise professionals ( M
age =44.4±11.0 years) participated in a three-hour, in-person workshop that was offered at one of four different locations. Participants completed pre- and post-workshop outcome assessment surveys., Results: Mixed MANOVA results comparing time (pre- versus post-workshop) by workshop location (sites 1 to 4) illustrated a significant within-subjects time effect ( p <0.001). All outcomes significantly improved from pre- to post-workshop ( p 's<0.001), demonstrating large effect sizes (partial eta-squared values ranging from 0.45 to 0.59)., Conclusions: Findings offer early phase preliminary support for the effectiveness of the chronic pain and physical activity training workshop for exercise professionals. Based on ORBIT model recommendations, findings warrant future phased testing via a pilot randomized clinical trial as well as testing for impacts that trained professionals have on activity adherence among their clients living with chronic pain. Eventual workshop adoption by exercise professional certification organizations would ensure widespread and sustainable access to qualified exercise professionals to help individuals engage in physical activity. By increasing the capacity of available exercise professionals to deliver effective support, active individuals could better manage their chronic pain and live well., (© 2020 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston.)- Published
- 2020
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5. Expanding Women's Health Practitioners and Researchers' Understanding of Transgender/Nonbinary Health Issues.
- Author
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Kattari SK, Brittain DR, Markus AR, and Hall KC
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- 2020
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6. Understanding Physiotherapists' Intention to Counsel Clients with Chronic Pain on Exercise: A Focus on Psychosocial Factors.
- Author
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Blouin JE, Cary MA, Marchant MG, Gyurcsik NC, Brittain DR, and Zapski J
- Abstract
Purpose: Twenty percent of Canadians experience chronic pain. Exercise is an effective management strategy, yet participation levels are low. Physiotherapists can be key to counselling clients to engage in long-term unsupervised exercise. Yet, investigations that identify psychosocial factors related to physiotherapists' intention to counsel are lacking. The purpose of this study was to examine whether physiotherapists' knowledge of chronic pain, beliefs about pain, and self-efficacy to counsel on exercise predicted their intention to counsel clients with chronic pain on exercise. Method: Practicing physiotherapists ( N = 64) completed an online survey that assessed their knowledge of chronic pain, beliefs about pain, self-efficacy, and intention to counsel. A two-step hierarchical multiple regression predicted intention. Step 1 controlled for years of practice, and Step 2 included study variables significantly correlated with intention. Results: Beliefs about pain ( r = -0.35, p < 0.01) and self-efficacy ( r = 0.69, p < 0.01) were significantly correlated with intention. The overall regression model was significant, F
3,60 = 18.73; p < 0.001. Self-efficacy was the sole significant predictor, t60 = 5.71, p < 0.0001, sr2 = 28%. Conclusions: Self-efficacy may facilitate physiotherapists' intention to counsel on exercise for chronic pain. If shown to be a causal factor, interventions that target a change in physiotherapists' self-efficacy should be pursued., (© Canadian Physiotherapy Association.)- Published
- 2019
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7. Moving Forward with Physical Activity: Self-Management of Chronic Pain among Women.
- Author
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Brittain DR, Gyurcsik NC, Tupper SM, and Downe PJ
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- Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Self Care, Chronic Pain therapy, Exercise, Self-Management
- Published
- 2018
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8. Differences in psychosocial responses to pain between sufficiently and insufficiently active adults with arthritis.
- Author
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Cary MA, Brittain DR, and Gyurcsik NC
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- Adult, Anxiety, Arthritis therapy, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain etiology, Prospective Studies, Self Care, Arthritis complications, Exercise, Guideline Adherence statistics & numerical data, Guidelines as Topic, Pain psychology
- Abstract
Objective: Adults with arthritis struggle to meet the physical activity recommendation for disease self-management. Identifying psychosocial factors that differentiate adults who meet (sufficiently active) or do not meet (insufficiently active) the recommendation is needed. This study sought to examine differences in psychosocial responses to arthritis pain among adults who were sufficiently or insufficiently active., Design: This prospective study included adults with medically diagnosed arthritis (N = 136, M
age = 49.75 ± 13.88 years) who completed two online surveys: (1) baseline: pain and psychosocial responses to pain and (2) two weeks later: physical activity., Main Outcome Measures: Psychosocial responses examined in this study were psychological flexibility in response to pain, pain anxiety and maladaptive responses to pain anxiety., Results: A between-groups MANCOVA comparing sufficiently active (n = 87) to insufficiently active (n = 49) participants on psychosocial responses, after controlling for pain intensity, was significant (p = .005). Follow-up ANOVA's revealed that sufficiently active participants reported significantly higher psychological flexibility and used maladaptive responses less often compared to insufficiently active participants (p's < .05)., Conclusions: These findings provide preliminary insight into the psychosocial profile of adults at risk for nonadherence due to their responses to arthritis pain.- Published
- 2017
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9. Demographic Trends in Utah College Students' Vigorous Physical Activity, 2003-2007.
- Author
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Eaves ER, Behrens TK, Dinger MK, Hines L, Brittain DR, and Harbour VJ
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- Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Male, Utah epidemiology, Young Adult, Diet, Healthy statistics & numerical data, Exercise, Health Behavior, Students statistics & numerical data, Universities statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Objectives: This analysis of a large-scale survey of college students from 2003 to 2007 explores relationships between meeting vigorous physical activity (VPA) recommendations and key demographic, lifestyle, and personal characteristics., Methods: Multivariate logistic regression modeling was used to analyze VPA data from the Utah Higher Education Health Behavior Survey, a descriptive cross-sectional survey conducted in 2003 (N = 4574), 2005 (N = 9673) and 2007 (N = 7938)., Results: Factors consistently associated with meeting VPA recommendations included involvement in extracurricular sports, being single, and daily consumption of fruits or vegetables. In contrast, factors such as older age (> 23 years old), having a particularly low (<18.5 kg˙m2) or high BMI (> 34.9 kg˙m2), and being a current smoker were associated with not meeting the VPA recommendation. This corroborates paradoxical findings that binge alcohol consumption correlates with meeting VPA., Conclusions: Findings support the need for targeted interventions among college students to support the establishment of long-term protective behavioral patterns against chronic disease risk throughout the life course.
- Published
- 2017
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10. Call to Action: The Need for an LGBT-Focused Physical Activity Research Strategy.
- Author
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Gorczynski PF and Brittain DR
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- Female, Humans, Male, Exercise, Research trends, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Published
- 2016
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11. Barriers to Physical Activity Among Gay Men.
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Cary MA, Brittain DR, Dinger MK, Ford ML, Cain M, and Sharp TA
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- Adult, Canada, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Self Efficacy, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States, Young Adult, Attitude to Health, Exercise, Homosexuality, Male psychology
- Abstract
Gay men may not be physically active at recommended levels to achieve health benefits. Thus, a need exists to identify general (i.e., common across populations) and population-specific barriers that hinder or stop gay men from participating in physical activity (PA). Salient barriers may be identified through the extent each barrier limits PA (i.e., barrier limitation) and the level of one's confidence to overcome barriers and engage in PA (i.e., self-regulatory efficacy). The purposes of this study were to (1) provide a description of general and population-specific barriers to PA among sufficiently and insufficiently active gay men, (2) identify barrier limitation and self-regulatory efficacy for the reported barriers, and (3) examine the associations between meeting the current PA recommendation, barrier limitation, and self-regulatory efficacy. Participants were 108 self-identified gay males aged 21 to 64 years who completed a web-based survey. A total of 35 general barriers and no population-specific barriers were identified by the sufficiently and insufficiently active groups. The sufficiently active group reported higher self-regulatory efficacy and lower barrier limitation for nearly all reported barriers. A binary logistic regression used to examine the associations between PA, barrier limitation, and self-regulatory efficacy was statistically significant, χ(2)(2, N = 108) = 19.26, p < .0001, R(2) = .16. Only barrier limitation significantly contributed to the model. Future research should continue to examine barriers to PA among gay men to determine whether an intervention needs to be designed specifically for gay men or whether a one-size-fits-all intervention would be effective in helping all men overcome common barriers to engaging in PA., (© The Author(s) 2015.)
- Published
- 2016
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12. The Effect of an 8-Week Tai Chi Exercise Program on Physical Functional Performance in Middle-Aged Women.
- Author
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Zacharia S, Taylor EL, Hofford CW, Brittain DR, and Branscum PW
- Subjects
- Female, Health Promotion, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Middle Aged, Accidental Falls prevention & control, Exercise physiology, Physical Examination statistics & numerical data, Tai Ji methods
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of an 8-week Tai Chi Chih exercise program on physical functional performance (PFP) among women aged 45 to 65 years. A quasi-experimental design with a nonequivalent comparison group was used. Forty-one healthy inactive women were assigned to either an intervention group (n = 19) or a comparison group (n = 19). A 60-min Tai Chi Chih exercise class was conducted twice a week for 8 weeks. PFP was measured at baseline and postintervention using the Continuous Scale Physical Functional Performance-10 (CS-PFP 10). Between-group differences were analyzed using one-way analysis of covariance (ANCOVA). After participating in the 8-week program, intervention group participants showed greater improvement in the CS-PFP measures (p < .05, η(2) > .06). However, the comparison group had little changes. The findings from this study suggest that participation in an 8-week Tai Chi Chih exercise program can improve PFP in healthy, community-dwelling middle-aged women., (© The Author(s) 2013.)
- Published
- 2015
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13. An Examination of Health Inequities among College Students by Sexual Orientation Identity and Sex.
- Author
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Brittain DR and Dinger MK
- Abstract
Background: Lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) college students may have an increased number of health inequities compared to their heterosexual counterparts. However, to date, no research has provided a comprehensive examination of health-related factors by sexual orientation identity and sex among a national sample of college students. Thus, the purpose of this study was to examine physical, sexual, interpersonal relations/safety, and mental health inequities by sexual orientation identity and sex among a national sample of college students., Design and Methods: Participants (n=39,767) completed the National College Health Assessment II during the fall 2008/spring 2009 academic year. Hierarchical binary logistic regression analyses were used to examine health inequities by sexual orientation identity and sex., Results: LGB students compared to heterosexual students, experienced multiple health inequities including higher rates of being verbally threatened and lower rates of physical activity and condom use., Conclusions: An understanding of health inequities experienced by LGB college students is critical as during these years of transition, students engage in protective (e.g., physical activity) and risky (e.g., lack of condom use) health behaviours, establishing habits that could last a lifetime. Future research should be used to design and implement targeted public health strategies and policies to reduce health inequities and improve health-related quality of life among LGB college students. Significance for public healthHealth inequities based on sexual orientation identity and sex among college students is a critical public health concern. Based on the results of the current study, lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) college students experienced multiple physical, sexual, interpersonal relations and safety, and mental health inequities. This understanding of health inequities experienced by LGB college students is critical as during these years of transition, students engage in protective (e.g., physical activity) and risky (e.g., lack of condom use) health behaviours, establishing habits that could last a lifetime. By intervening during the college years, targeted public health strategies and policies can be designed and implemented to reduce health inequities and improve health-related quality of life among LGB individuals during mid-to-later adulthood.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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