INTRODUCTION
Physical activity has been described as the ‘best buy in public health’.1 Physical activity reduces the risk of a large number of health conditions and contributes to positive mental health. Yet fewer than 40% of adults achieve the recommended minimum level of activity, which is 30 minutes of moderate physical activity at least 5 days per week,2 or 60 minutes moderate activity most days for people who are trying to lose weight. Promotion of these levels of physical activity is particularly important for people with type 2 diabetes. Evidence suggests that any reduction in sedentary time is good for metabolic health,3 and that improvement in metabolic function (as measured by HbA1c) occurs when people with type 2 diabetes increase their levels of moderate activity.4
However, people with type 2 diabetes find it more difficult to engage in regular physical activity than they do modifying their diet,5 and most do not regularly undertake activity.6 It is only recently that interventions designed to ameliorate impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) or improve management of type 2 diabetes have seriously attempted to incorporate physical activity regimens alongside dietary advice or education.7,8 Many organisations stress that exercise is ‘a cornerstone of diabetes management’9–11 and some authors recommend ‘exercise prescription’,12,13 although, evidence suggests that exercise referral programmes are of limited effectiveness in promoting long-term changes in physical activity.10 Overall, evidence is lacking about how physical activity is implemented and sustained in the everyday lives of people with type 2 diabetes.
Recent qualitative studies embedded within randomised control trials (RCTs) have highlighted that, not only does increasing physical activity ‘act as a gateway behaviour, that is, a behaviour that produces positive effects in other behaviours’ such as diet,7 but that ‘increasing activity require(s) continual proactive effort’.8 Nonetheless, the longitudinal follow-up of participants in these studies was either limited to 9 months,7 or retrospective.8 While qualitative studies ‘nested within’ RCTs14 are clearly valuable, the experiences (and potentially motivation) of participants recruited to RCTs may differ from those undergoing routine health care. Furthermore, the types of intensive physical activity interventions implemented in RCTs are ‘unlikely to be cost-effective within resource constrained healthcare systems’.14
Promoting physical activity, particularly among older adults, has been described as a ‘formidable topic’.15 There is now extensive literature exploring perceived barriers or ‘burdens’8 to increasing physical activity, both in older groups generally,15–17 and in people with type 2 diabetes in particular.6,18,19 Barriers that have been identified include: poor health, lack of time, ageing, adverse environments;17,20,21 safety/physical vulnerability, availability of facilities, cost, lack of motivation;16,20 cultural norms and social expectations;19 and difficulties exercising, tiredness, and being distracted by something good on television.18 While previous research has focused on perceived benefits as well as barriers to being physically active,16,22 the emphasis, to date, has tended to be on the latter. But it is unlikely that simply removing barriers is in itself sufficient to enable people to undertake physical activity. This study takes a different approach and examines the ways in which people living with type 2 diabetes talk about implementing and sustaining increased physical activity, through a repeat interview design. In doing so, a key aim was to explicate successes in diabetes self-management, and signal potential ways that physical activity could be incorporated and maintained in peoples' everyday lives.
RESULTS
In general, physical activity was not a key issue and the discussion, and salience, of physical activity was marginal in participants' accounts. Contrary to exercise being advocated as a ‘cornerstone of diabetes management’, few participants acknowledged that physical activity overall was fundamental to their diabetes self-care, and many communicated that they were:
‘Not winning medals for the exercise stakes.’ (Eric, I2)
Participants claimed to have only received vague and non-specific guidance about physical activity from health professionals (if physical activity had been mentioned at all), and emphasised a perceived lack of interest and encouragement over time.32 For example:
‘They don't ask you anything. They just say “are you getting exercise?” I says “Oh yes I get exercise”. They don't enquire as to what type of exercise.’ (Lindsay, I4)
‘Well they'll ask, y'know, what exercise you get … but they haven't said “Oh I think you should be walking twice as far” no, nothing like that.’ (Duncan, I4)
Embedded in most participants' accounts was an awareness of the contemporary discourse stressing the health benefits of regular physical activity:
‘Everybody knows that. Healthy lifestyle eh.’ (Mary, I4)
‘When you read the papers they say exercise is good for you.’ (Walter, I4)
There was, however, limited appreciation articulated of the benefits of physical activity for blood glucose control:
‘They say light exercise is good for you, but I don't know if it helps with the diabetes or not.’ (Walter, I4)
Only two participants intimated ‘that [exercise] would burn off some of the sugar,’ (Eric, I2) and only one suggested that this connection was communicated by health professionals:
‘There was one doctor who once said to me back in the days when I was still on tablets that eh walking was a good way to get the blood sugar levels down.’ (Callum, I4).
Walking, however, was the one activity that some participants described successfully adopting and sustaining over the 4 years:
‘I will walk — a much more sedate approach to keeping fit.’ (Callum, I4)
‘I don't mind a bit [of a] walk, but that's the strength of my exercise.’ (Walter, I4)
General views about physical activity and problematic aspects of physical activity maintenance are discussed before exploring the main themes. For those few participants who had successfully implemented and, importantly, maintained increases in their physical activity levels walking dogs played a vital role. The three ways that walking and dogs were enmeshed in participants' accounts were: 1) incidental walking; 2) incremental physical activity gains; and 3) augmenting physical activity maintenance.
Difficulties implementing and maintaining physical activity
Some participants characterised themselves as ‘a couch potato’ (Sadie, I2) or remarked that ‘exercise equals pain’ (Callum, I1). For most, any physical activity was incidental to their daily lives and consisted of domestic activities (for example, hoovering or gardening) or walking to achieve specific (non-health related) goals. As Allan said:
‘I walk out and in to the pigeon loft at the back door, over to the shop for my cigarettes, paper.’ Allan (I4)
For those participants without responsibility for, or access to, a dog, their walking intentions were often not realised. For some, their ‘opportunities’ for walking were presented as limited:
‘I'm not a joiner [laughs] eh but I do go out with the walking group … but it's only- well we do it once or twice a month.’ (David, I4)
Or opportunities for walking were produced as reliant on external factors outside of their control. For example, Jennifer (aged 68) talked about regularly walking in her third interview with her neighbour, but by the fourth interview the neighbour had moved away and so it was less easy for them to walk together:
‘I've got a new neighbour moved in a couple of doors down and she's into walking. So I'm walking quite- quite a- too much for me really y'know, but she says “you'll get used to it”.’ (Jennifer, I3)
‘I had a neighbour two doors down and we used to walk a lot. We used to walk right round the country park and it took two hours on a Sunday morning, but she moved and it's not quite so easy now.’ (Jennifer, I4)
For others without the routinising impetus of a dog, walking could be an unrealised good intention:
‘I may be sitting here thinking here “I mean it's a nice day I'll go for a walk this afternoon”.’ (Sadie, I3).
Or the desire to deviate from the activity of walking would prove too tempting:
‘I don't walk with Bob [husband] like we were going walking … On a nice- when I say I walk up to [place] for the bus, if it's just me going up the town I'll walk to the next bus stop … and then I have to walk up past [supermarket] “I'll just nip in and I'll get some milk. Oh, while I'm here I'll just have a coffee or maybe I'll just have my lunch instead” y'know [laughs]. So having been very good sweating the pounds off me I'm having an early lunch in [supermarket] and then I walk up to the bus stop [laughs].’ (Sadie, I4)
For participants who had initially engaged in other forms of activity after being diagnosed with diabetes — such as exercise at a gym — ‘it [had] faded out’ (Frazer, I4) by the fourth interview. For others ‘the novelty wore off’ (Fiona, I2) much sooner, as Pauline eloquently described:
‘I've got an exercise bike. It's the best ornament I ever bought.’ (Pauline I2)
For some, increasing physical activity had only ever been a good intention:
‘My intention was to … maybe go on a treadmill or something’ (Walter, I4)
‘I was going to buy a bike, but I don't really have anywhere to keep it’ (Callum, I4).
Incidental walking
Having a dog, or having access to a dog, provided the extrinsic incentive for self-professed ‘naturally lazy slob[s]’ (Mary, I2) or participants who lacked intrinsic motivation to exercise to achieve and maintain regular physical activity.
Iris and Duncan, for example, both had their own dogs — dogs that pre-dated their diagnoses of type 2 diabetes. Iris (aged 49) classified herself as ‘not really a very energetic person’ (I1) and talked very little about physical activity throughout the interviews:
‘I'm not a gym person and I don't like swimming … I mean going for a walk's fine, I can cope with that … I went through spates of it when you go with all your pals to the gym and we all do this and that and then it falls through cos you all go to the pub afterwards and just [laughs] — that's the good bit [laughs].’ (Iris, I4)
However, Iris had two dogs that she walked:
Interviewer (I): ‘What, if anything, are you doing to keep yourself physically active?’
Iris I4: ‘Apart from walking the dogs not a lot [laughs].’
Duncan (aged 66) differed from Iris in that he did not position himself as inherently opposed to physical activity. Although at the time of the fourth interview he was recuperating from an operation so was not engaging in his usual activities (for example, bowling or gardening). Nevertheless, the incidental physical activity generated by walking the dog was an enduring theme over the 4 years in Duncan's interviews:
‘We've got a Labrador you've got to exercise every day. I have a good walk every day.’ (I1)
‘Oh yes, I mean that's exercised every day, every morning and the wife usually comes as well so we both get our exercise walking the dog.’ (I2)
‘I get plenty of exercise every day, you can see one of the reasons through there [points to the dog].’ (I3)
In the fourth interview, despite his convalescence, the centrality of incidental walking was re-emphasised:
‘We get regular exercise every day … Rain, hail or shine … We're out in all weathers aren't we [speaks to the dog].’ (I4)
Incremental physical activity gains
Diane (aged 64) is a prototypical example of someone who struggled, because of multiple chronic illnesses (arthritis and anxiety), to undertake physical activity. She had difficulty merely ‘doing my housework’ (I1), and unfortunately she was unable to swim (‘I'm scared of the water’ [I2]):
‘Because of the arthritis I don't exercise an awful lot … like if I go for a walk er I have to watch how far I walk because I might be alright getting there, but I've got to remember that I've still got to get back.’ (I1)
‘I don't do much exercise because, well mainly because I'm sore with the arthritis.’ (I2)
‘I'd like to be able to do more exercise, but I have arthritis so it's a problem. I'm limited to how much I can do but having said that … I've been trying to go for a walk around the block.’ (I3)
‘I just go round the block. Occasionally eh like we do go to the park. Like Ralph [husband] only works in the mornings so in the afternoon I've seen us taking him [the dog] to the park and letting him have a run about with a ball.’ (I4)
I: ‘I suppose your exercise — cos I remember when I spoke to you last about, well it would have been 3 years ago, and you were saying that you weren't — you wanted to do more than you could do?’
Diane I4: ‘Aha.’
I: ‘I mean mostly the arthritis I think is … ?’
Diane I4: ‘Aha, it's still the same.’
I: ‘But then having said that if you've got him [dog] you are doing more than you were?’
Diane I4: ‘Aha. Oh well I have to erm it makes me go out y'know.’
It was evident that while the health context for Diane had remained static over the intervening 3 years, a dog now provided a mandate for increased, and sustained, amounts of walking.
Mary (aged 52) had a chequered relationship with physical activity across the interviews, oscillating from emphatic rejection of formal exercise to attempting and failing to maintain increases in physical activity:
‘Every week I say “right, okay, this is the week you are going to do something” … it hasn't happened … I've no excuse. I've got a swimming pool at the bottom of my street … The motivation's no[t] there! [laughs] … I would never go to the likes of your aerobic classes or anything. I'm just not interested in things like that, Or going to the gym … I call it Living Hell. Y'know, the “Living Well” gym! I said “Well it is to me!” … It's just bloody living hell, who wants to go there y'know.’ (I1)
At the time of the second interview, 6 months later, Mary had joined a gym:
‘… and when I come back from the gym I mean my count's down [blood glucose level] about 6 which apparently is normal n' that's obviously to do with exercise. So I know the answer. I just don't do it eh’. (I2)
However, her gym attendance had dwindled rapidly and she ‘hated’ much of the equipment:
‘Och I've got to force myself. I'm not- well obviously I'm not a person who enjoys exercise let's be honest [laughs] erm or I wouldn't have ended up like this would I? I just hate it n' yon step thing, I hate that as well … I did have this wild theory I would go three times a week. That lasted a week’. (I2)
At the time of the third interview Mary had tried, and discontinued, swimming in the intervening 6 months, and her visits to the gym were increasingly sporadic:
‘I'm still going, but maybe only- like I'll go one week and I'm thinking “ooph” … It's not something I enjoy doing, it's as simple as that. It's like a chore.’ (I3)
By the fourth interview, Mary had incorporated walking into her life:
‘I'm taking — not enough probably — but I'm certainly walking a heck of a lot more than I used [to]. Oh aye, I go out with my neighbour with her dog.’ (I4)
Although Mary's relationship with physical activity had not fundamentally changed — ‘I'm not a very physically active person. I'm really not. Just I'm not into exercise. I've tried going to a gym and I hate it’ — her construction of walking was markedly different:
‘I like the walking, but not up mountains or anything. I don't mind going for a walk … It's not a fast walk if you like, y'know we tend to stroll, but I reckon it's better than nothing … I probably could do with going myself out walking quicker. But it's the motivation I lack.’ (I4)
Therefore, by the fourth interview, walking with her neighbour and her dog was crucial to the physical activity gains Mary had made since diagnosis. And, as she said herself, ‘I reckon it's better than nothing’ (I4).
Augmenting physical activity maintenance
While most participants undertook less physical activity than recommended for manifold reasons, including lack of interest/motivation, unfacilitative shift work patterns, other chronic conditions (for example, angina or arthritis) one participant, Andy (aged 44), engaged in exemplary self-management behaviours consistently over the 4 years.33 Walking was Andy's primary form of physical activity, which was fully integrated into his daily routine before a year post-diagnosis:
‘We go out for walks. I walk about 8 miles every single day … 2 at lunchtime and 6 at night erm they'll [his children] often come with me at night … It's not just a passing phase y'know that's the way it is now for as long as I'm able to draw breath basically erm because I want to keep on feeling this good … it's just part of my life now erm and I would miss it if I stopped.’ (I1)
‘Still walking 6, 7, 8 miles a day erm every day … It's just become a part of the routine that I enjoy. It's not a chore, it's something that I actually enjoy doing.’ (I2)
‘It all boils down to the fact that it was a novelty at first y'know and probably I honestly thought that “Och it won't last this exercise lark” y'know … But it's got to the stage where I enjoy it and I almost need it at the end of the day … just to get out for an hour or so, just on your own for reflection away from the noise of the children and people nagging [laughs]. (I3)
Andy I4: ‘But the walking is catered for with the dog.’
I: ‘Yes absolutely. And was that one of the reasons why you got her?’
Andy I4: ‘No it was Heather [daughter] wanted a dog. So she did all the research and found the dog. So we agreed to take her knowing that the walking would very quickly pass down to me. But I walk every night anyway so erm it's good to have some canine company … So I do between 7 and 8 miles every day, 7 days a week.’
Although initially Andy's children ‘often’ (I1) accompanied him on his nightly walks, by the third interview quiet ‘reflection’ (I3) typified his habituated exercise routine. In the 3-year period between the third and fourth interview the family had got a dog. Therefore, in Andy's case, the ‘good … canine company’ (I4) augmented a pre-existing pattern of walking behaviour that he had successfully implemented and sustained prior to dog ownership.