Home
Scholarly Works
Self‐Efficacy and Adherence to Exercise During and...
Journal article

Self‐Efficacy and Adherence to Exercise During and as a Follow‐Up to Cardiac Rehabilitation

Abstract

We examined self‐efficacy (task, in‐class, and barrier) and physical activity during transition from hospital‐based cardiac rehabilitation. Participants ( N = 50) completed measures of self‐efficacy at the midpoint and end of the program. Cardiac rehabilitation adherence was monitored and physical activity assessed by telephone interview 6 and 12 weeks post‐program. Mid‐program barrier self‐efficacy predicted adherence ( R 2 adj. = .15, p < .05). Barrier self‐efficacy at the end of the program predicted physical activity 6 weeks later ( R 2 = .11, p < .05). Task self‐efficacy at the end of the program predicted home‐based exercise at the 12‐week follow‐up ( R 2 = .10, p < .05). Results have implications for intervention efforts to ease transition from supervised to independent home‐based exercise.

Authors

Millen JA; Bray SR

Journal

Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Vol. 38, No. 8, pp. 2072–2087

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

August 1, 2008

DOI

10.1111/j.1559-1816.2008.00381.x

ISSN

0021-9029

Contact the Experts team