Beliefs and interests in physical activity programs of cancer survivors and their romantic partners

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Abstract

Purpose: Physical activity is associated with improved health outcomes for cancer survivors and their romantic partners, yet it is unclear if joint exercise programs for survivor-partner dyads are acceptable. This study examined demographic, relationship, exercise, and cancer history correlates of survivors’ and their romantic partners’ couples-based exercise beliefs and their preferences for program designs. Methods: All participants (survivors n=209, partners n=155, couples n=143) completed an online survey. Correlations and linear regression analyses were used to examine correlates of participants’ importance of and interest in couples-based exercise and their likelihood of joining a couples-based exercise program. Intraclass correlations estimated shared variance at the couple level. Results: Most participants believed that couples-based exercise was highly important (51.8%) and were interested in a couples-based exercise program (61.5%), but fewer survivors believed their partner would be interested or would likely join a couples-based program. Across all outcomes, partner support for exercise was most strongly associated with participants’ couples-based exercise beliefs (r = 0.19–0.54, p

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Ulrich, G. R., Callan, S., & Ranby, K. W. (2023). Beliefs and interests in physical activity programs of cancer survivors and their romantic partners. Journal of Cancer Survivorship, 17(1), 160–173. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-021-00996-x

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