Objective: Exercise interventions benefit cancer patients. However, only low numbers of patients adhere to these interventions. This review aimed to identify predictors of exercise intervention adherence in patients with cancer, during and after multimodality cancer treatment. Methods: A literature search was performed using electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane) to identify relevant papers published before February 1, 2017. Papers reporting randomized controlled trials, conducted in adult cancer patients who participated in an exercise intervention during and/or after multimodality cancer treatment, and providing outcome of factors predicting exercise adherence were included. Papers were assessed for methodological quality by ...
PurposeMaintaining high adherence rates (session attendance and compliance) in exercise programs dur...
PURPOSE: To systematically review the methodologic quality of, and summarize the evidence from trial...
Introduction: Therapeutic exercise, although potentially beneficial, does not appear acceptable to m...
Objective: Exercise interventions benefit cancer patients. However, only low numbers of patients adh...
Objective: Exercise interventions benefit cancer patients. However, only low numbers of patients adh...
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to identify demographic, clinical, psychosocial, physical ...
Understanding the factors that influence adherence to exercise programs is necessary to develop effe...
For an exercise intervention to be successful, it is important that cancer survivors adhere to the p...
Evidence is accumulating to indicate exercise, for people with advanced cancer, can result in a rang...
Physical activity (PA) is a known behavior to reduce cancer risk and improve cancer survivorship, ye...
The combination of an increasing number of new cancer cases and improving survival rates has led to ...
PURPOSE: Exercise is efficacious for people living after a cancer diagnosis. However, implementation...
PurposeMaintaining high adherence rates (session attendance and compliance) in exercise programs dur...
Exercise therapy is a common supportive strategy in curative cancer treatment with strong evidence r...
The combination of an increasing number of new cancer cases and improving survival rates has led to ...
PurposeMaintaining high adherence rates (session attendance and compliance) in exercise programs dur...
PURPOSE: To systematically review the methodologic quality of, and summarize the evidence from trial...
Introduction: Therapeutic exercise, although potentially beneficial, does not appear acceptable to m...
Objective: Exercise interventions benefit cancer patients. However, only low numbers of patients adh...
Objective: Exercise interventions benefit cancer patients. However, only low numbers of patients adh...
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to identify demographic, clinical, psychosocial, physical ...
Understanding the factors that influence adherence to exercise programs is necessary to develop effe...
For an exercise intervention to be successful, it is important that cancer survivors adhere to the p...
Evidence is accumulating to indicate exercise, for people with advanced cancer, can result in a rang...
Physical activity (PA) is a known behavior to reduce cancer risk and improve cancer survivorship, ye...
The combination of an increasing number of new cancer cases and improving survival rates has led to ...
PURPOSE: Exercise is efficacious for people living after a cancer diagnosis. However, implementation...
PurposeMaintaining high adherence rates (session attendance and compliance) in exercise programs dur...
Exercise therapy is a common supportive strategy in curative cancer treatment with strong evidence r...
The combination of an increasing number of new cancer cases and improving survival rates has led to ...
PurposeMaintaining high adherence rates (session attendance and compliance) in exercise programs dur...
PURPOSE: To systematically review the methodologic quality of, and summarize the evidence from trial...
Introduction: Therapeutic exercise, although potentially beneficial, does not appear acceptable to m...