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Articles

Feasibility and acceptability of a group-mediated exercise intervention for gynecological cancer survivors

, PhDORCID Icon, , MSc, , PhDORCID Icon, , PhD, , PhD, , PhDORCID Icon, , MD, , PhD & , PhD show all
 

Abstract

Purpose

Examine feasibility and acceptability of a group-mediated cognitive-behavioral (GMCB) intervention targeting planned, self-managed physical activity (PA).

Design

Sequential mixed methods, single arm pre-/post-test design with a 4-week follow-up.

Participants

Post-treatment gynecologic cancer survivors.

Methods

Participants attended 8 weekly facilitator-led group sessions and completed assessments at baseline, post-intervention and follow-up. Feasibility was assessed by recruitment rate, retention rate, capture of outcomes, intervention usability and intervention fidelity. Acceptability was examined via qualitative interviews. Preliminary estimates of intervention effectiveness (PA, PA social cognitions and sleep) were collected.

Findings

355 participants were approached and 38 consented. Twenty took part in the study and 17 (85%) completed the intervention. Thematic content analysis revealed positive group experiences. Cognitive-behavioral strategies were beneficial. Goal-setting and shared cancer recovery experience facilitated connection among group members.

Implications

Program acceptability was high among a diverse sample of gynecologic cancer survivors and delivery of the program is feasible to this group of gynecologic cancer survivors. Recruitment challenges were present but study retention was high.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This research was supported by the University of Guelph-Humber Research Fund. We would like to acknowledge the ELLICSR, Princess Margaret Cancer Center, and the study participants for making this research possible.

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